Highway Star
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First, at a total cost of 2 million dollars per machine... That there would require 67,000 visits at a 35$ profit (not counting energy usage, etc). Second, it can *produce* snow. Actually, an impressive amount of it. But *distributing* the snow is the issue. Suppose you could have a groomer just plowing it around.
Yep. About $2 million per unit plus a large chiller (heat exchanger) for the source water. And it should be inside a building...about 50ft tall iirc....maybe partally underground. So for 2 units (VIM 850), a chiller, building, labor and transport....$6-8M?
http://www.ide-tech.com/dwlfls/IDE Snowmaker Product Info (English)-April 2008.pdf
Plus a quad chair on Downdraft to the tune of $1M.
Ball park it at 1000 KW for the whole system as described above with two VIM 850's (including pumping costs), so that's 24,000 KWH per day, or very roughly $2400 per day. Steep? No, not at all when you consider the output is 3 acre ft per day of dense spring snow off of two units. $800 per acre foot is pretty cheap for snowmaking, really.
Upper-Middle Cascade and Downdraft are roughly 1,800 ft long, and roughly 300 ft wide combined. That's roughly 12 acres. So, they could put down 3 inches of snow per day across both those trails, or get one 100ft wide trail open in about two days. Certainly enough to maintain a base throughout the summer, epecially with proper drainage and covering.
A quad chair on those two trails could probably support about 800 people at once, and 2,000 total skier visits throughout the day. Figure.....4,000 skier visits on a 3 day weekend with good weather. Assuming a $50 day ticket price, but an actual $35 ticket yield per skier visit, they would pull in $140,000 on tickets alone. Add increased food/bev/misc and you're probably around $200,000 in revenue per weekend. Also consider renting to race groups/camps or hosting camps midweek, could probably bring in another $50,000+ per week.
So, lets call it $250,000 in additional revenue per week. From early May to late October, or roughly 25 weeks. Adjusting for some bad weather.....maybe $5 million in revenue in those 6 months? Roughly 200,000+ skier visits....?
Costs: Electric, roughly $200k to run the snowmaker for 80 days, producing a total of 20 ft of snow on 12 acre ft. Labor....? The other lift? Etc? K-1 is already running in the summer, there is already staff on the mountain, lodges are open...?
Anybody want to make a legit cost analysis? IMHO, it's something they could make money at and cover the costs of the equipment in a reasonable time.
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