Something that happens on the lifts that scare the crap out of you?
#21
Posted 10 January 2006 - 01:20 PM
#23
Posted 11 January 2006 - 05:32 AM
#24
Posted 11 January 2006 - 09:25 AM
#25
Posted 11 January 2006 - 10:54 AM
-while night skiing at stowe, I swear our gondola was going to hit the last tower (but never did) due to high winds
-Our chair almost hit the tower on the Jordon Bowl Quad at Sunday River one winter when i was there (again, due to high winds)
-8 years ago on Madonna 1 at Smuggs, it was so windy I didn't open the safety bar until I got to the top platform, then got blown off the chair. (I was one of the last to load that day)
-rode around the bullwheel on Chair 6 at Breck in december with my sit-ski student-his chair got stuck to the seat of the carrier somehow, so I kicked the safety gate and the lift stopped because the operator wasn't all that quick to figure out what was going on (or maybe everything happened so fast he didn't have time to react)
-last weekend at Smuggs, the Sterling chair stopped a few times on the way up it in the afternoon and each time it stopped I swear it had at least a 15 foot rollback. That didn't leave a happy feeling in my stomach at all!
dave
This post has been edited by djspookman: 11 January 2006 - 10:56 AM
#26
Posted 11 January 2006 - 12:24 PM
djspookman, on Jan 11 2006, 10:54 AM, said:
-while night skiing at stowe, I swear our gondola was going to hit the last tower (but never did) due to high winds
-Our chair almost hit the tower on the Jordon Bowl Quad at Sunday River one winter when i was there (again, due to high winds)
-8 years ago on Madonna 1 at Smuggs, it was so windy I didn't open the safety bar until I got to the top platform, then got blown off the chair. (I was one of the last to load that day)
-rode around the bullwheel on Chair 6 at Breck in december with my sit-ski student-his chair got stuck to the seat of the carrier somehow, so I kicked the safety gate and the lift stopped because the operator wasn't all that quick to figure out what was going on (or maybe everything happened so fast he didn't have time to react)
-last weekend at Smuggs, the Sterling chair stopped a few times on the way up it in the afternoon and each time it stopped I swear it had at least a 15 foot rollback. That didn't leave a happy feeling in my stomach at all!
dave
#29
Posted 12 January 2006 - 08:41 AM
djspookman, on Jan 12 2006, 07:50 AM, said:
dave
The Sterling lift's top terminal is silimar to this one:

dave
This post has been edited by djspookman: 12 January 2006 - 08:42 AM
#30
Posted 12 January 2006 - 01:33 PM
djspookman, on Jan 12 2006, 04:50 AM, said:
dave
#31
Posted 13 January 2006 - 04:36 AM
aug, on Jan 12 2006, 04:33 PM, said:
That makes sense now that you say that-I have seen the counterweight on the old top of the madonna chair move quite a bit when the lift stopped (pre-2003, as CTEC came in and put a "traditional" bullwheel on the top instead of the terminal show above)
dave
#32
Posted 13 January 2006 - 03:30 PM
aug, on Jan 12 2006, 02:33 PM, said:
Old chair 9 ar Crystal (WA) would do that. It was a top drive, bottom tension as well, and I remember people standing on the load board who got clocked by the chair in front of them as the carriage rolled back.
Yaoma, on Jan 11 2006, 04:25 PM, said:
ripped him right out of the work chair thank god i had a raido to call the stop
Glad I'm not the only one who's done that. I forgot to unclip from tower 23 on Baker's old chair 6. The funny thing is, I don't recall it being especially scary, probably because you really don't fall all that far with a 6' lanyard. My brand-new coworker was plenty scared, thogh
#33
Posted 13 January 2006 - 03:41 PM
"We are the people our parents warned us about." Jimmy Buffett
#34
Posted 26 January 2006 - 04:11 PM
If life gives you lemons, make lemonade. And then find someone whose life is giving them vodka and have a party.
-Ron White
#35
Posted 13 February 2006 - 08:31 AM
Well we arrived up at the top station and he tries to hop off the chair, but is stuck, so I gave him a big shove, and nothing happened, so we both hunched back into the chair and rode around the bullwheel, so I kicked the safety wand, only to have it fly off to my surprise! Apparently it was just sleeved over a stub so the long wand went flying, and the stub of the switch didn't move at all, so the lift didn't stop. So I figured, no big deal, the lifty will hit the stop button. Well we waited, but he still didn't hit it. He finally noticed that something was going wrong and hit it, but not until we were well over the downhill safety net. I was a little upset at him for this, but told him it was no big deal that we had to ride back down the chair. (my wife was in the chair behind us and later said that the lifty didn't move a muscle the whole time this was happening, even after we had ridden around the bullwheel!!) So down we went. I thought to myself, no big deal, I've downloaded before, so we'll just get off the lift at the bottom and ski over to the quad and try that instead... ..
The Locke Mountain Triple has a mid-station, but it is unused. This didn't bother me at all until we were about 4 chairs from the mid-station and I noticed that the snow level on the platform was about 4" from the bottom of the chairs. I got really scared really quick!!! About the same time the chair in front of us got to the mid-station, a mtn ops person arrived on a snowmachine with a shovel in hand. I thought to myself, "cool, they're here and they'll radio the lift attendant at the bottom and have them stop the lift so they can shovel it out so we won't get hung up on the platform".
We had no such luck.
We yelled down the the mtn ops person about the situation, and all they said was "hold on!".. argh.. I guess that's all we could do, so I swung my feet up to the left as high was they'd go, and my student braced himself as good as he could (as his ski and sit-ski hangs down pretty low). The chair swung back about a two feet, enough for me to be looking down at the drop off on the other side of the platform. UGH. We managed to hold on some how as the chair swung back and then went up as we passed over the platform. After we left the platform, the chair bounced up and down a bit as we headed down the line. We got to the bottom and the lift attendant stopped the lift and gave us the option to go back up, so I replied, "you're F@#$%n' guy up top is sleeping, so no way!" He apologized for him, which diffused my anger and helped me realize that it wasn't his fault, it was the guy on top's fault for not paying attention. I appologized to him for screaming at him. I also mentioned that they should shovel off that mid-station since we almost fell off the lift because of it, so he said he'd send someone up to take care of it. He asked me if there was anything else he could do for us and I just said no and went over to the HSDQ with long lines... (Kudos to this guy for beign so calm and helpful!!!!)
Three things I got really pissed about were:
-the CRAPPY safety switch on top (hello.. don't go cheap on safety!!!)
-the horrible reaction time from the lifty at the top station, as he should have hit the stop button before we even made it around the bullwheel
-the huge amount of snow on the midstation platform, considering it had been DAYS since the last storm, although I guess it could have been blow-over from snowguns. Even so, it should have been taken care of before the lift was open to the public.
Needless to say, that was defiantely the scariest thing that has even happened to me on a lift! The whole time as we were heading over the mid-station platform I was thinking that we're probably de-rope the chair, or worse, our chair may detach itself....
dave
This post has been edited by djspookman: 13 February 2006 - 08:32 AM
#36
Posted 14 February 2006 - 10:09 AM
#37
Posted 21 February 2006 - 07:59 PM
Well guess what. At almost the exact same spot as where the gondola stopped, Summit Express made an emergency stop that almost threw all of us out of the chair. The lift had to be running 1150+ fpm that night, and it stopped within about 15 feet. I had about had it! So we took a few more runs and decided to take one last run up the gondola. Huge mistake.
Another very scary moment was on Super Bee at Copper. It was an extremely windy day, and you know what that can do. The chairs were swinging and hitting into the towers. One after another.
One more. Back to Keystone. This was on Peru Express, and I couldn't have been more than 4. I fell at the top unloading platform and chair after chair, after chair were going over me. It took at least 10 chairs before the lift stopped. So, evidently I have had some very rough experiences at Keystone.
This post has been edited by skierdude9450: 21 February 2006 - 08:00 PM
"Today's problems cannot be solved by the level of thinking that created them." -Albert Einstein
#38
Posted 26 February 2006 - 07:49 PM
This took place @ Winter Park today.
loading a Sit Ski can be very dangerous when the lift op does not slow / stop the lift as asked and he said ok...
Trying to unload a sit ski when people have fallen getting off the chair ahead of us. Lift op does not slow / stop lift. We ended up tripping the stop gate.
Oh And this one is not to offend anyone.
People who go FLYING down the mountain on a skinny run that is busy as crap.
This post has been edited by Kicking Horse: 26 February 2006 - 07:49 PM
#39
Posted 26 February 2006 - 08:09 PM
#40
Posted 27 February 2006 - 12:16 PM
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