This 1940s image of the Magic Mile inspired Pee Chee folder artworkConstruction of the original Magic Mile began in mid-1938 and finished late 1939. As the Riblet company's first chairlift, the design strongly resembled the company's previous efforts building aerial trams for mining material transport.
Construction of the chair complemented the opening of Timberline Lodge in February 1938. The first magic mile chair loaded passengers on November 17, 1939, and was dedicated by the Crown Prince and Princess of Norway (later King Olaf). A portable rope tow was erected for the previous season (1938-1939), and remained in operation for at least several years.
The original chairlift was a single: each chair held one rider, but there were many chairs on the rope. The lift line was situated about a tenth mile (160 m) to the east of the present chair, such that the upper bullwheel was inside Silcox Hut. Records suggest the bottom was to the east side of the lodge. The ride took 11 minutes and carried 225 passengers per hour. It was as popular a summer tourist attraction then as it is now.
Timberline Lodge shut down for World War II and struggled financially through the 1940s and early 1950s. Mounting disrepair, vandalism, neglect and unpaid taxes closed it February 17, 1955 at which time the Magic Mile was nonfunctional. The lodge reopened late that year under Richard Kohnstamm's management. The Mile was made functional again, and in the following summer, ski racing camps began.
Second chairlift 1962–1992
By 1962, the Magic Mile had long been a challenge to maintain. The operator of Timberline had succeeded in making the lodge financially viable, and so removed the Mile and built a new double Riblet-made chairlift at the present location. It featured a midway station for loading and unloading. Midway unload allowed chairlift operation when conditions closed the upper mountain. The midway load was useful for mid-to-late summer skiing when little snow remained on the lower mountain.
The ride would have taken about the same time, at 10 to 12 minutes, but tighter chair spacing and two riders per chair made the capacity about 800-1000 per hour.
The bottom of the Mile was placed at the west side of the lodge for easy lodge access, and for skier convenience from the top of the Pucci chairlift, which was installed in 1956.
The Palmer chairlift, which opened July 1, 1980, was situated for convenient skier and snowboard transport from the top of the Mile. The Palmer was upgraded to a high speed quad in 1996.
Third chairlift 1992–present
Magic mile lower terminal is just below the tree-line.The current chairlift named Magic Mile was upgraded from a fixed grip double to a detachable high speed quad in 1992, but is slightly longer at 5,500 feet (1.04 miles or 1,676 m). The midway station was removed, and the top station is slightly higher than its predecessor.
This Poma-built chair has a capacity of 3,000 passengers per hour, but is operated at 1,600 passengers per hour, with a ride time of just under 6 minutes.
The use of a detachable chairlift significantly reduces maintenance needed to clear the haul rope. When inclement weather is expected, the chairs are removed and stored in the lower lift house. The rope runs at low speed to prevent the buildup of snow and ice. The chairs are redeployed in an automatic operation which takes about 30 minutes.
I got this from: http://en.wikipedia....wiki/Magic_Mile
The first picture shows the original Single Chairlift, and the other two show the current Poma HSQ.
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This post has been edited by Warren733: 12 February 2007 - 03:32 PM











