This nonprofit ski area operates in a city park.Loading area for this Riblet triple.Top terminal looking towards downtown Anchorage.Tower 14 and the top terminal.View from the summit.The upper half of the line is very low angle.View up at tower 9.Middle lift line.Breakover towers above the base lodge.The first few towers.Drive terminal and counterweight.Riding up the line.Another view of the bottom terminal.Unloading ramp.
if i had a nickel for every time subway advertising was in a lift blog post i would have two nickels, which isn’t alot but its weird that it happened twice.
Good question. I’d never seen a Riblet 6-rocker before, which doesn’t mean they didn’t make them. When we built the current chair 2 at Baker, they sent us some ‘heavy-duty’ 4-rockers that were supposedly to be used where a 6-rocker would go. Apparently the sheave bearings were rated for the increased load, but the standard 4-rocker beams and axles were not.
I really like the lighting near the terminals
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if i had a nickel for every time subway advertising was in a lift blog post i would have two nickels, which isn’t alot but its weird that it happened twice.
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Did Riblet make those 6-sheave assemblies?
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Good question. I’d never seen a Riblet 6-rocker before, which doesn’t mean they didn’t make them. When we built the current chair 2 at Baker, they sent us some ‘heavy-duty’ 4-rockers that were supposedly to be used where a 6-rocker would go. Apparently the sheave bearings were rated for the increased load, but the standard 4-rocker beams and axles were not.
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