Bottom return station.View up the line from the base.Tower 1 at the base.Tower 2.View back towards the village.Unload area with exposed bullwheel.Poma control desk.View down from the summit.Inside the drive terminal.Drive motors inside a vault below the top station.Leaving the village.Riding up the very long line.A gradual breakover.Top station with vault drive below.Unloading ramp in winter.View down the line from Storm King.Looking down the line.Upper lift line.Lower lift line.First few towers.Top station adjacent to Timberline Express.
That was a stop gate bypass. The stop fate was a photo-eye setup, and if it was super windy and snow blew in front of it it would cause nuisance stops. We could bypass it until things improved.
You didn’t see a chair from the Eagle on this lift. I I never had to use one. I had two spares from when we shortened the lift and an original-style bail if I used both of those, which I did not.
The reason I asked that question is because I remember hearing on skilifts.org forums that whatever startup signal (in this case bell) was hooked up to a fire alarm/ automatic fire suppression system in the vault. I heard the drives and gearbox are still in the vault.
There was never a fire-suppression system in the vault. There was a fire-alarm style start alarm. The only things currently in the vault are the drives for the current lift; we removed and scrapped the drives and gearbox and sold both electric motors and the diesel.
Was it powered by two electric motors? I cannot imagine the motor in that image is making 1352 HP, maybe it was just cranked up on the amps? Judging by the forced induction I wonder. If it was that would be a ridiculously funny thing to have just kept around.
What is the white mushroom button on the contol panel? I can only read the word “stop” on the legend plate…
LikeLike
That was a stop gate bypass. The stop fate was a photo-eye setup, and if it was super windy and snow blew in front of it it would cause nuisance stops. We could bypass it until things improved.
LikeLike
Ah, interesting.
Thanks for the reply.
LikeLike
There’s some nice footage here showing the lift when it had chain contours and had to cross over the G-lift:
LikeLike
Also triple-E and I lifts. Nice find! As an aside, the paramedic featured right at the end still works here, almost 30 years later.
LikeLike
Forgot about this comment, thank you for a month of being hooked on Rescue 911 lol
LikeLike
More here http://www.skilifts.org/old/tech_tb41maintenance.htm
LikeLike
Here’s a video I made of the lift in March 2013:
LikeLike
When on this lift I saw a competition chair from the eagle on this, why was that? BTW: that’s a nice control panel on pic 7.
LikeLike
You didn’t see a chair from the Eagle on this lift. I I never had to use one. I had two spares from when we shortened the lift and an original-style bail if I used both of those, which I did not.
LikeLike
Now if I think about it it was on pioneer at WP.
LikeLike
It definitely was Pioneer since Pioneer had two Competition chairs for #44 and #75.
LikeLike
What is the startup signal on this lift? bell or a gray fire alarm or buzzer?
LikeLike
It was a fire-alarm-style bell.
LikeLike
The reason I asked that question is because I remember hearing on skilifts.org forums that whatever startup signal (in this case bell) was hooked up to a fire alarm/ automatic fire suppression system in the vault. I heard the drives and gearbox are still in the vault.
LikeLike
There was never a fire-suppression system in the vault. There was a fire-alarm style start alarm. The only things currently in the vault are the drives for the current lift; we removed and scrapped the drives and gearbox and sold both electric motors and the diesel.
LikeLike
Was the new lift extended further up?
LikeLike
No, it was built right on top of the vault from the old lift
LikeLike
Was it powered by two electric motors? I cannot imagine the motor in that image is making 1352 HP, maybe it was just cranked up on the amps? Judging by the forced induction I wonder. If it was that would be a ridiculously funny thing to have just kept around.
LikeLike
Twin 676-hp motors, yes. The cooling fans were almost the same size as the motors themselves.
LikeLike