bigbog
Active member
^ wish we had that problem
+1
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^ wish we had that problem
Some mountains like Smugglers, took off the top of their lift towers and lowered the cable to protect it from wind. It ended up being a great move for them. When Stowe's lifts are on wind hold, Smuggs lifts are spinning. It did make skiing Lift Line that much harder though!
Good ideas... But still not convinced as to the true reason, especially in new England, as to why they have to be so high.
That can play a small part in it. But it has more to do with the location of the resort. Ski areas like Smuggs and Bretton Woods that are located in notches are much less effected by winds than areas on the other side of the mountain.It could also be the fixed grip chairs vs. detachable as well. Usually the fixed grips can work in higher winds than detachable.
Good ideas... But still not convinced as to the true reason, especially in new England, as to why they have to be so high.
All good thoughts/guesses...
I just think about the recent flurry of deaths from falling from a chairlift (regardless of if the bar was down or whatever circumstances surrounded it), and wonder if the supporting reason for the height of them outways the chance of death/injury aspect of it.
There's gotta be someone on here who knows the concrete answer!
. If the resort does not want to ski under it they only need to maintain 5 feet of clearance from the lowest part of the chair, if they wish to ski under it they must maintain 13 feet of clearance from the top of the seat,
Tell me a mountain that has a lift even close to 5 feet off the ground....if you can't then I would have to say your guess is incorrect.
Thus the discussion........
All good thoughts/guesses...
I just think about the recent flurry of deaths from falling from a chairlift (regardless of if the bar was down or whatever circumstances surrounded it), and wonder if the supporting reason for the height of them outways the chance of death/injury aspect of it.
There's gotta be someone on here who knows the concrete answer!
Tell me a mountain that has a lift even close to 5 feet off the ground....if you can't then I would have to say your guess is incorrect.
Well, sometimes those obstacles are roads or ski trails, and you don't want to clear them. The fact that you can ski under the lift is a feature, not a bug.[/quote]So my point is why don't they clear obstacles so they may have a chairlift that is lower...
Coulda fooled me....not looking for a debate.
So my point is why don't they clear obstacles so they may have a chairlift that is lower...
Coulda fooled me.
why? cut down trees to clear a path? install extra towers and have a longer cable so the chair can hug the ground?
Tell me a mountain that has a lift even close to 5 feet off the ground....if you can't then I would have to say your guess is incorrect.
Thus the discussion........