NWOhiogal
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2018
- Messages
- 347
I've been paying attention to the Skyliners that are going up, and I have a few questions.
1. What happens when the weather's bad? Florida gets a lot of pop-up thunderstorms and gully-washers in the summer, and some of them are intense with sideways rain and high winds. Will Disney continue to run the Skyliner in those conditions? Since the storms often pop up with little notice, will Disney stop running the Skyliners if there's even a threat (which seems to be all day every day during the summer)? Or will they just keep running them and hope for the best?
2. How long does it take for the gondolas to get to their destinations? It looks to me like it'd take about 10-15 minutes. What if a guest gets on one of those things and then has a medical issue (heart attack, trouble breathing) right after getting in the air? Is there a way to alert anybody? Or stop the gondola and get them down? Or do they just have wait to have their medical issue tended to until they get to the station? To me this is one big advantage of being on a bus or in a car, if you have a medical issue getting you help is quick. I'm wondering what Disney's plan is with the gondolas, since I'm sure this issue will come up at some point.
1. What happens when the weather's bad? Florida gets a lot of pop-up thunderstorms and gully-washers in the summer, and some of them are intense with sideways rain and high winds. Will Disney continue to run the Skyliner in those conditions? Since the storms often pop up with little notice, will Disney stop running the Skyliners if there's even a threat (which seems to be all day every day during the summer)? Or will they just keep running them and hope for the best?
2. How long does it take for the gondolas to get to their destinations? It looks to me like it'd take about 10-15 minutes. What if a guest gets on one of those things and then has a medical issue (heart attack, trouble breathing) right after getting in the air? Is there a way to alert anybody? Or stop the gondola and get them down? Or do they just have wait to have their medical issue tended to until they get to the station? To me this is one big advantage of being on a bus or in a car, if you have a medical issue getting you help is quick. I'm wondering what Disney's plan is with the gondolas, since I'm sure this issue will come up at some point.