brentm77
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2013
- Messages
- 1,997
The problem becomes that the buttons have no way of knowing how many people are in whatever party wants to go to a specific floor.
Sure, but there are possible solutions. I don't think picking how many people you have would work, since other people may see you picked that floor and jump on with you. But I suspect sensors could count when a person gets on and off so that the elevator knows how many people it picked up for each trip and how many got off at each floor. That way it never tries to pick up people when there isn't likely to be room. Of course, things get more complicated based on some people taking up more room, mobility devices, etc. So maybe it wouldn't work. But I have seen these elevators work well in other settings and RCL must think they are an upgrade to have invested in them.
Edit: It looks like RCL is experimenting with moving the system to their other ships too, so they must work well in their opinion: https://www.royalcaribbeanblog.com/2024/04/30/royal-caribbean-testing-better-elevators ("Destination elevators aren't just a fad, they're a way to more efficiently tackle the issue of getting passengers between decks and that's been a traditional pain point on big ships.")
I love DCL, but it seems like DCL found a model that works and is very slow to make innovate. That's not necessarily a bad thing in general, as I love the classic ships. But there are some areas that would greatly improve the cruise experience if they were willing to be more innovative, while keeping what works. DCL will probably take the response to the Wish as a sign that people don't want change, but I disagree with that conclusion. I think a design that was closer to the classic ships, with innovations that merely added to the experience would have been a smash hit without nearly as much controversy. Love the Wish or hate it, there is no question that it has a very mixed reaction, which was almost certainly not the goal of the redesign.
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