• Welcome to AlpineZone, the largest online community of skiers and snowboarders in the Northeast!

    You may have to REGISTER before you can post. Registering is FREE, gets rid of the majority of advertisements, and lets you participate in giveaways and other AlpineZone events!

Lift Accident Devils Head, WI

Glenn

Active member
Joined
Oct 1, 2008
Messages
7,692
Points
38
Location
CT & VT
Rolling backwards has got to be scary. A kid I raced with in highschool was on a lift when that happened. I want to say it was Brodie Mountain? This would have been early/mid 1990's.
 

mikestaple

Member
Joined
Oct 28, 2008
Messages
286
Points
16
Location
Duxbury, MA
I was just contemplating the same thing... Scary thought.

I can't even imagine having to lift the bar and chuck my kids 20 feet down. That ski resort is in a pretty big tourist area (Wisconsin Dells) and does ok (ex-pat Cheesehead here). Lots of traffic on weekends. I'm kinda surprised their lifts are ancient (as a poster above indicated).
 

SIKSKIER

New member
Joined
Nov 13, 2006
Messages
3,667
Points
0
Location
Bedford and Franconia NH
We had a rollback at Cannon while I was riding of all lifts,the newest.2 years ago we were on the Peabody detach when it stopped for quite a while.Twice when it attempted to start we went backwards about 50-100 feet.Not scary but a real weird feeling.We were all ready to jump to jump into that famous Cannon powder of hardpack!
 

Kerovick

New member
Joined
Nov 19, 2005
Messages
420
Points
0
I run a lift and I'm terrified of a rollback. Good thing it's rare.
 

abc

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 2, 2008
Messages
5,995
Points
113
Location
Lower Hudson Valley
"Rare"?

I never thought about it ever happening except one or twice altogether.

Now I'm scared. Seems like it happens a lot more often than I thought! Yeah I can see myself jumpping off a chair at certain spot. But from a chair going at 40mph???
 

millerm277

Active member
Joined
Nov 18, 2006
Messages
1,815
Points
38
Location
NJ/NH
Now I'm scared. Seems like it happens a lot more often than I thought! Yeah I can see myself jumpping off a chair at certain spot. But from a chair going at 40mph???

You watch the a chair like the one you're sitting on go horizontal and literally shatter and destroy itself, and I think you'll be taking your chances too with the fall.
 

billski

Active member
Joined
Feb 22, 2005
Messages
16,207
Points
38
Location
North Reading, Mass.
Website
ski.iabsi.com
I had to jump once. Actually, my daughter slid off and I slipped trying to grab her, and clung on until I lost holding strength, from about 10 feet. I wasn't worried about my injuries, but I was absolutely scared to death I was going to land on her, skis first. I missed her head by inches.
 

jerryg

Member
Joined
Aug 12, 2006
Messages
757
Points
16
On a couple of the HSQs at Heavenly there are actually signs that say the lift may operate in reverse. I recall being on one and it did roll back about 20 feet and I had not yet seen the signs. I was freaked out by it.
 

threecy

New member
Joined
Nov 17, 2003
Messages
1,930
Points
0
Website
www.franklinsites.com
To put things in perspective though, ski lifts are still one of the safest forms of transportation out there. One is a heck of a lot more likely to have something happen while driving to the mountain, as compared to riding a lift.
 

jaywbigred

Active member
Joined
Feb 24, 2006
Messages
1,569
Points
38
Location
Jersey Shore
This thread is bad for your mental health. We had a couple of longish delays (well, not THAT long, but long enough to produce tears form my 26 y/o gf because she got so cold) this past weekend at Mt. Snow, including a stop-start-stop pattern that repeated at least 4 times, and all I could think of was this thread. I was just waiting for it to start rolling back. Very scary stuff. But I have to assume its like sharks...scary, but unlikely.
 

ERJ-145CA

Active member
Joined
May 6, 2007
Messages
2,025
Points
38
Location
Northwestern, NJ
Wasn't there also a detachable in Colorado some years ago where some individual chairs slid backwards on the rope and knocked other chairs off?
 

threecy

New member
Joined
Nov 17, 2003
Messages
1,930
Points
0
Website
www.franklinsites.com
Wasn't there also a detachable in Colorado some years ago where some individual chairs slid backwards on the rope and knocked other chairs off?

I believe you may be confusing a fixed grip bullwheel incident in Colorado with a detachable issue in Western Canada.
 

Glenn

Active member
Joined
Oct 1, 2008
Messages
7,692
Points
38
Location
CT & VT
This thread is bad for your mental health. We had a couple of longish delays (well, not THAT long, but long enough to produce tears form my 26 y/o gf because she got so cold) this past weekend at Mt. Snow, including a stop-start-stop pattern that repeated at least 4 times, and all I could think of was this thread. I was just waiting for it to start rolling back. Very scary stuff. But I have to assume its like sharks...scary, but unlikely.


Best investmet we made for ski gear....."heated boots". Does my wife still get cold? Sure. But it does make those really cold days a bit easier and allows her more runs before having to go inside.
 

Rambo

Member
Joined
Sep 8, 2008
Messages
891
Points
18
Location
Binghamton, NY
I believe you may be confusing a fixed grip bullwheel incident in Colorado with a detachable issue in Western Canada.

Seems those 2 incidents were both YAN lifts.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lift_Engineering

"Potential problems with Yan lifts began to surface as early as 1985, when the upper bullwheel on the Teller lift at Keystone, Colorado literally fell off its axle. Faulty welding was blamed. Two people were killed and 47 injured."

"Yan detachable lifts were subject to a series of disastrous accidents, the most famous of which was on the Quicksilver lift at Whistler-Blackcomb Resort in British Columbia, Canada. The Quicksilver accident killed two and injured eight.[3]. The accident occurred when the emergency brake was pressed to help a skier who had fallen while unloading. A chair started sliding downhill and struck the next chair which got stuck on a tower."
 

jaywbigred

Active member
Joined
Feb 24, 2006
Messages
1,569
Points
38
Location
Jersey Shore
Best investmet we made for ski gear....."heated boots". Does my wife still get cold? Sure. But it does make those really cold days a bit easier and allows her more runs before having to go inside.

Glenn, she's got em. She's skinny to begin with, and she has super narrow feet, so they get cold despite the heater sometimes, esp. towards the end of the day when the charge starts to weaken. Also, I think she was mumbling something about not having them fully charged, which doesn't help. That part is up to her. You can only lead a horse to water...

Given the situation, I decided to keep my thoughts (and the contents of this thread) to myself ;)
 

ERJ-145CA

Active member
Joined
May 6, 2007
Messages
2,025
Points
38
Location
Northwestern, NJ
Seems those 2 incidents were both YAN lifts.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lift_Engineering

"Potential problems with Yan lifts began to surface as early as 1985, when the upper bullwheel on the Teller lift at Keystone, Colorado literally fell off its axle. Faulty welding was blamed. Two people were killed and 47 injured."

"Yan detachable lifts were subject to a series of disastrous accidents, the most famous of which was on the Quicksilver lift at Whistler-Blackcomb Resort in British Columbia, Canada. The Quicksilver accident killed two and injured eight.[3]. The accident occurred when the emergency brake was pressed to help a skier who had fallen while unloading. A chair started sliding downhill and struck the next chair which got stuck on a tower."

That was an intersting article, it seems to prove that you get what you pay for.
 
Top