2) I know I've heard of resorts using a "cherry picker" to reach people stranded on lifts for long periods of time; how do these machines work, and how slowly do they move?
Ever see an electrical truck?
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2) I know I've heard of resorts using a "cherry picker" to reach people stranded on lifts for long periods of time; how do these machines work, and how slowly do they move?
Here's a question. What should you do if, although highly unlikely, the lift does begin to rollback?
Ever see an electrical truck?That's a cherry picker, or at east a type of one. Chances are they'd use a mobile one, either attached to something tracked, or towed behind it somehow.
I'd probably ditch my skis and jump at a lowest elevation point... and pray that that would happen on a sick powder day. There was an accident not too long ago in Chile or Argentina where the a chair actually came off the cable and started sliding down the cable, dominoing about 5 chairs. Not the same scenario but some people got their legs crushed between the chairs.Here's a question. What should you do if, although highly unlikely, the lift does begin to rollback?
I've seen video of tests that someone ran on a decommissioned lift before it was taken down where they loaded up the chairs with sand bags to simulate the weight of passengers. It got spinning so fast in reverse with the safety devices disabled that the chairs were mostly ripping right off the haul rope and/or smacking into the lift structure and getting bent like pretzels. The sand bags simulating passengers were flying all over the place. IIRC the test got a little out of control and they couldn't even stop it once it got going, the only way it stopped was because one of the chair flew up into the bull wheel and jammed it up...
I could not find the video but here are some pictures of the test.
http://skilifts.org/chairlift_facts_eskimoliftdestruction.htm
A friend of mine who works as ski patrol/instructor (he's also a rock climbing instructor) at Wildcat always carries a length of rope with him which can be used to escape from a chair if the need arises.
If you know how to Dulfersitz rappel you'd only need a length of rope the height of the chair. If you want to go safer you could also take a sling of webbing (to fashion as a harness), carabiner, and ATC, or belay/rappel device.
I could not find the video but here are some pictures of the test.
http://skilifts.org/chairlift_facts_eskimoliftdestruction.htm
I've seen video of tests that someone ran on a decommissioned lift before it was taken down where they loaded up the chairs with sand bags to simulate the weight of passengers. It got spinning so fast in reverse with the safety devices disabled that the chairs were mostly ripping right off the haul rope and/or smacking into the lift structure and getting bent like pretzels. The sand bags simulating passengers were flying all over the place. IIRC the test got a little out of control and they couldn't even stop it once it got going, the only way it stopped was because one of the chair flew up into the bull wheel and jammed it up...
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I uploaded my photos. Here she is hanging. Unfortunately, my video does not show much more than this, and is not as zoomed in.
I'd probably ditch my skis and jump at a lowest elevation point... and pray that that would happen on a sick powder day. There was an accident not too long ago in Chile or Argentina where the a chair actually came off the cable and started sliding down the cable, dominoing about 5 chairs. Not the same scenario but some people got their legs crushed between the chairs.
Good of you to watch out for that kid...I think that sometimes they can just take off from their parents. I've had my kids do that but only at smaller areas like Crotched or the Valley area at Pats Peak, and my kids are older.A couple of years ago at Gunstock, a young skier, 8 or 9 yrs old, asked to ride up with me on the lift. As the chair was pulling out, I thought he was sliding out of the chair before I could put the safety bar down. I pinned him to the back of the chair with my arm. You should have seen the look on his face. I wasn't going to take the chance he was sliding out but he looked at me like I was a crazyman. We did talk for the rest of the ride up .. I asked where his parent were and he couldn't tell me, it almost sounded like they just dropped him off... amazing.
bvibert said:I'd like to know when she slipped out of the seat. It seems likely to me that she probably didn't load correctly and the chair should have been stopped before she reached such a height..
Actually if it happened close to the boarding area (in hindsight) it would have been better for her to jump off immediately rather than wait till she got to that height.