T-Bar – Moose Mountain, YT

This T-Bar was relocated from an Eastern Canadian ski area to remote Dawson City, Yukon.
The line features 9 towers and about 30 carriers.
View up the middle part of the line.
Lower lift line with wide tower spacing.
Tower 5.
T7.
Breakover towers near the summit.
Unloading area.
Top tension station.
Side view of the upper terminal.
Upper station overview. No lift shack.
Split tower 8.
Side view of the drive.
Lift overview.
The line seen from the lodge.

19 thoughts on “T-Bar – Moose Mountain, YT

  1. ShangRei Garrett's avatar ShangRei Garrett June 20, 2024 / 10:19 am

    This is the final one, right? You’ve now photographed every single lift in North America?

    Liked by 1 person

    • Noah's avatar Noah June 20, 2024 / 3:44 pm

      There’s one T-bar ski hill in Mexico with various urban/ scenic lifts across central America and Caribbean

      Liked by 1 person

    • RandyM's avatar RandyM June 20, 2024 / 6:39 pm

      I know of a dozen or so ski clubs in Ontario alone plus a few small US areas like the chairlift at Double H, NY listed but not yet photo’d.

      Like

      • Peter Landsman's avatar Peter Landsman June 20, 2024 / 7:07 pm

        I have been to all the public lifts. There are about 20 ski areas in the US and Canada that are either private clubs or military installations I do not have access to to photograph.

        Liked by 1 person

        • Muni's avatar Muni June 20, 2024 / 7:24 pm

          north america does not end at the Rio Grande! :)

          Like

        • Peter Landsman's avatar Peter Landsman June 20, 2024 / 7:27 pm

          True but both lift companies consider Mexico part of the Latin American market, totally separate from US/Canada.

          Liked by 2 people

  2. humoresque811's avatar humoresque811 June 20, 2024 / 12:10 pm

    Congratulations on the achievement Peter! It’s truly incredible that every lift in the whole of the US and Canada is accessible here.

    Liked by 3 people

  3. liftnerd's avatar liftnerd July 1, 2024 / 1:40 pm

    Can anyone identify the manufacturer of this contraption? I wonder if it is homemade, perhaps reusing hall or Samson towers? If this is true, I wonder if the builder modeled the drive terminal after a Mueller.

    Like

    • WH2Oshredder's avatar WH2Oshredder July 5, 2024 / 2:51 pm

      Towers look a lot like Hall or Poma, never seen a return terminal like this. Drive definitively modeled after a Mueller but the bullwheel is much smaller. idk????

      Liked by 1 person

      • liftnerd's avatar liftnerd July 5, 2024 / 3:16 pm

        Could the towers be Samson, perhaps? It was relocated from Eastern Canada.

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      • festerblatt's avatar festerblatt October 10, 2024 / 10:30 am

        shrouding might be hiding something, but the drive doesn’t appear to resemble a T-E, as they have different bullwheel and the crossmember goes the other way as per Bleu:
        Also, T-E split towers have different attachment points for the arms, the ones on this look more like Hall. Return terminal doesn’t look like a Timberland either, although it looks professional enough to probably not be homemade. Any idea where it came from originally? Maybe we can figure it out based on that.

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    • Coloradoskilifts's avatar Coloradoskilifts June 6, 2025 / 1:12 pm

      Maybe the drive is hall? It looks similar to the drive on the old E chair at Hunter Mountain but with a smaller bullwheel.

      E chair’s drive:

      T-bar’s drive:

      You can see a few differences, but it doesn’t look too far from hall.

      Like

    • WH2OSHREDDER.'s avatar WH2OSHREDDER. April 18, 2025 / 2:17 pm

      It has to be Moose mountain for a reason 😉

      Liked by 2 people

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