SkiBachelor, on Apr 5 2006, 07:28 PM, said:
The grip that you're looking at is the only Yan detachable grip that had problems, while the Type 7 had no reported probelms. However, resorts still freaked along with the government and had their yan detachables retrofitted or replaced entirely. The reason why the Type 11 grip failed was because it couldn't support the extra weight of the bubble that was it supposed to be designed for and it failed.
The YAN 7 grips had most or all of the same design flaws I listed above. The YAN 11 was supposed to be beefier than the 7, mainly for the bubble but supposedly for better durability. I hadn't heard that the extra weight of the bubble had anything to do with the accident, but it's been a while since I read the report and it could have been in there somewhere.
floridaskier, on Apr 5 2006, 07:39 PM, said:
I don't really understand how the Yan grip worked. When it opens, what part moves? I see the famous marshmallow springs, but I can't think of how they translate into grip force
YAN 7 and 11 grips had not one, but two mobile jaws, hence the two levers sticking up from the grip body. They were hinged on either side of the shiny strip in the middle. The marshmallow springs were inside the squarish frame on top of the mobile jaw levers, and they pressed the jaws down and in towards the rope. The compression rail(s), unlike in a Poma or Doppelmayr, pressed the mobile jaw levers inward towards each other which opened up the grip.