Quote:
Originally Posted by sailor734
A quick Google search of outdoor refrigerated rinks suggests that 50F (10C) is easily doable and some suggest they can function up to 70F with a properly sized chiller (outdoor rink in LA)
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If I recall correctly, the very first NHL outdoor game (at least in the modern era) was in Las Vegas between Gretzky’s Kings and a team that escapes me.
Gretzky said the ice was perfect. I believe low humidity is actually helpful, but sunlight of course, is not. Saint John shouldn’t have any serious problems considering how often we have overcast days, and how our sunniest days are usually the coldest days during the winter.
However, in typical Saint John fashion, our city leaders and partners in the provincial and federal governments found a way to cheap out or mess it up somehow. Hopefully, it’s more the latter… and they just need to troubleshoot. But my guess is it’s the former, that they cheeped out on the chiller, and they’ll need to invest in a better one for this rink to actually work as intended.
All might not be lost… Saint John is a city of microclimates. They may be able to use that current chiller for another outdoor rink at a colder, less humid and more inland location, and then buy a better chiller, like the one in Fredericton, for this “seaside” skating rink.