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Skyship at needles also has RFID gates along with the quad.I'll pay closer attention the next time I am there, but I believe that Needles Eye is the only upper mountain lift at Killington with an RFID gate.
At Waterville this past weekend they didn’t have gates or people checking passes. I was like, did I just waste money on a lift ticket? Figured they must have had some kind of other tech, maybe like an EZ pass. Idk.Berkshire East, my home mountain, has RFID. So do Catamount, Jay Peak, Bolton Valley, Waterville Valley, Saddleback
Maybe that is the place I was thinking of.At Waterville this past weekend they didn’t have gates or people checking passes. I was like, did I just waste money on a lift ticket? Figured they must have had some kind of other tech, maybe like an EZ pass. Idk.
One interesting point about the data aspect- at least at ORDA ski centers, only the lifts out of the base area have RFID gates. The upper mountain lifts have no validation of the tickets, as it is assumed you have already went through an RFUD gate to reach that point. Is this common at other areas?
It doesn't help anyone to have the pass fail and causing delay on upper mountain lifts. Just a hassle.It is becoming more common to put gates in at all lifts. But yes, the standard was to only put them at base area lifts to check for access. I believe Sugarbush has them at all lifts now?
I believe Sugarbush has them at all lifts now?
They finally realized that a large group of friends could ride all day with just 2 passes?It is becoming more common to put gates in at all lifts. But yes, the standard was to only put them at base area lifts to check for access. I believe Sugarbush has them at all lifts now?
This is what I mentioned earlier. It is like a fastpass on the highwayDoes anyone know what the deal is at Waterville with their RFID. They give you the RFID card, but they do not have any gates, and they never scan you.
#1 reason for RFID failure = you have another RFID on you. i read that somewhere.
Me too, especially for season pass holders, you pay them $600 to access the lifts, oh, by the way, we're gonna need another $5 for your RF card, petty. I wasn't gouged for my picture ID all these years. I'm sure that cost more to produce than my RF card.I have no problem with RFID.
I have a significant problem with the $5 fee tacked on for getting a card by many ski areas, as it's entirely unjustified and serves as yet another way to sneakily rip off first-time/infrequent skiers. RFID cards cost just about nothing. A few cents more than a traditional printed ticket.
Vail's hand scanners are RFID scanners. They do not like gates. The gantry thing is the Epic Mix, that records your laps off the RFID cards. But the hand scanners are the "ticket checkers".Oh ain't that the truth! The first year we had them at Sugarbush, that was the #1 issue. We had signs up saying only one RFID card on you at a time. When a customer would have a problem, we'd ask to see the card, and 4 others would be in the pocket.
I was surprised to see ticket scanners still in use at Okemo and Mt Snow. I visited both this week for the first time since the early 2000s and was issued an RFID-looking card, but there were ticket scanners present at the base lifts. I saw weird overhead gantries at the lift "wait here" area which I thought were RFID readers. For the scanners, I had my pass in my glove pocket (my jacket doesn't have a convenient spot for that) and it worked each time. I wasn't charged $5 for the card either, so I guess they're just typical cards with barcodes and not RFIDs.
I think I’d be ok with reselling a pass (theft of service) from a mega Corp ski resort place, especially Vail. But to be honest, I’ve never been much of a rule follower.There's no way to tell, just by looking at a card, if its valid, for what date, etc. I had an extra one from Thursday at Okemo that I tossed at the window once I got one for Mt Snow on Friday (wasn't charged $5 for either). I left ~ 12:30 and *could* have given it away but chose not to. (I used as VSAA 4-pass voucher so the day was paid for already, at less than $50). Its not like the old paper tickets with the zip ties, which could have been transferred and with the buyer knowing what he was getting. I certainly wouldn't give someone $20, $50 etc in the lot for an RFID card that may/may not be valid. The wicket was designed so that it couldn't be transferred from person-to-person. That would all be theft of services, anyway.