Posted Jul 7, 2022, 3:09 AM
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Registered User
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Join Date: Jan 2015
Location: BC
Posts: 4,382
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Quote:
Originally Posted by FarmerHaight
I would hope they are concerned about the riders' comfort, not the ability of the life to operate in winter conditions. And I think the other consideration would be wind?
First of all, the people riding the gondola will have already walked outside to the train or bus stop and possibly waited there for 10 or 15 minutes, so they should be dressed for the elements. Secondly, there are gondolas and chairlifts all over Europe with heated seats, so gondolas can be quite comfortable even on cold days.
As for the wind, was there anything in the feasibility study about how many days on average might be lost to wind versus what is already lost to slippery driving conditions?
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From the Daily Hive article linked above (and I've read this info before)
Quote:
The gondola will offer a peak hour capacity of 3,000 passengers per hour per direction, with 30 passenger capacity cabins departing as frequently as every minute.
It will use a tri-cable system, known as 3S, similar to Whistler Blackcomb’s Peak to Peak Gondola, for enhanced speed, safety, and redundancy. Using 3S, the gondola will still be able to operate safely in wind conditions of up to 100 km/hr.
Artistic rendering of the SFU Burnaby Mountain gondola terminal station. (SFU)
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