joshua segal
Well-known member
For the amount of open terrain, Killington is way too crowded in November. I think it is a terrible idea - at least for Killington's early season regulars.
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Doing it in November? Great, cant wait for all the, "teh east haz no snoh" comments after that.
I've always wondered what a Chinese Downhill from K-1 to the base of Skyeship would look like. I'd pay money to see that.
Superstar probably will be bumped up to #2 on the snowmaking list instead of filling out Snowdon. With Killington Opening mid-October to early-November since the Stairway went in, there won't be any problem except for the very warmest of winters to have . Don't forget that most of the middle/upper portions of Superstar are now lined with the SnowLogic ultra-low-E guns (with half the spacing as the old SR towers), and the bottom is getting several Fan towers this summer. The low-E snowmaking tech really has grown by leaps and bounds the past 3 years or so. Who knows what next winter will bring!
This is likely to be Killington's biggest marketing / image disaster ever.
This is likely to be Killington's biggest marketing / image disaster ever.
Like I said I couldn't give a hoot about the race. I'm just worried about how it will effect other snowmaking operations. The last year they had the DEW Tour at K they never blew any snow at all on Double Dipper or Devils Fiddle. Neither trail officially opened that year although they were poached. Cover was thin on a lot of other areas of the mountain too. Do you know how unsightly it was to ride the Canyon chair Jan-Mar & see a bare DD? Didn't really help their snowmaking reputation that year.
Not to mention it messed up Bear/Skye Peak for weeks because of trail closures.
My hunch is no matter how much snow K makes on Superstar for a worldcup race in November, it will be far less than they'll eventually make on Superstar over the course of the full season for spring operations.
The Dew Tour was making a massive amount of snow, in an area where they usually wouldn't of made as much, and then don't "use" that snow until it melts out at the bitter end.
My hunch is no matter how much snow K makes on Superstar for a worldcup race in November, it will be far less than they'll eventually make on Superstar over the course of the full season for spring operations.
The Dew Tour was making a massive amount of snow, in an area where they usually wouldn't of made as much, and then don't "use" that snow until it melts out at the bitter end.
I've said for years that they need to use superstar for more events. Duh. But certainly not in November. These people are lunatics.
If they're unable to make enough snow for the race then chances are they or anyone else wouldn't even be open. It isn't difficult to calculate how many extra man hours and acres to get enough width and base on SS for this based on an average wet bulb percentile for that time period. If they feel the low E guns are not going to cut the mustard you can bet they'll have more rental compressors on hand for the K guns. They know their infrastructure and capabilities better than anyone in the armchair.
These ultra-low-E guns are killers. You're underestimating them. They were used extensively in early season snowmaking last year. The ground guns have a maximum flow of 75 gpm which would be at around 0F WB and colder. Generally guns don't get worse than 10-12x in efficiency at 28 WB (which is the upper operating temp of these guns. The Ratnik low-E guns can go up to 29.6F WB!) That means they'd be pumping out somewhere on the order of 7.5 gpm while only using 8 cfm of air. Guess what. You put two of those side-by-side and you get the output of the HKD SV10 or HKD Impulse, which are the "gold standard" now of early-season snowmaking. At that rate you could put them every 5 feet and you'd use less air and make far more snow than before.
This ain't your father's technology. Air-hogs are quickly going the way of the past.