Originally posted by Suzanne033
My Mom also has arthritis. She got a motorized wheelchair.
DO THE WHEELCHAIR, you won't regret it. Even if it is only for one day.
I just wanted to make a distinction between a power (motorized) wheelchair and an electric/motorized
scooter (also called
ecv). It sounds like what Suzanne's mother had was an ecv. Most people don't realize that power wheelchair and power scooters are not the same thing. If you ask for a power wheelchair, you might be told they don't rent them, when what you really wanted was an ecv.
The WDW parks and off-site medical equipment companies
do rent
ecvs and manual (push) wheelchairs. Only some of the off-site companies rent power wheelchairs and , in general, will only rent them to people who have a power wheelchair, but don't want/can't travel with it.
ECVs are fairly easy to drive and with a little practice, most people can become quite comfortable driving them. The steering is usually controlled by a tiller (similar to steering a bike). The speed is controlled by a throttle on the tiller. They also have a speed setting - often you can choose between Turtle for slow and Rabbit for fast. There really isn't any individualized set up of them - sort of like a car; you just get in and drive. If you can drive one ecv, you can pretty mcuh drive any other ecv.
Power wheelchairs are controlled by a joystick (or sometimes another type of access for someone not able to use a joystick). The joystick actually controls a computer which controls the speed and steering of the wheelchair. The computer controller is actually programmed specifically for the person who will be driving the wheelchair. For example, my DD's controller can have up to 5 programs and each program can be set up with 6 different parameters (things like how quickly it accellerates, how quickly it decellerates, top and slowest speed, how much the joystick needs to be pushed in each direction to turn). Two identical power wheelchairs might be programmed totally differrently.
It takes a lot more practice to drive a power wheelchair, they are much more expensive than ecvs, and they need to be individually set up for the person who will be driving it. So that's why they are usually only rented out to people who already are familiar with driving them.