mesaboy2
Reading Is Fundamental.
- Joined
- Oct 28, 2009
- Messages
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Or choice c.) The blog post is mistaken. What makes this blogger any more reliable than personal experiences related here?
Because it agrees with the OP's preconception.

Or choice c.) The blog post is mistaken. What makes this blogger any more reliable than personal experiences related here?

Because it agrees with the OP's preconception.![]()
as well. I see it didn't work out so well for them.so how is that cramming "more" people into the park? if those 3,000 guests leave and 3,000 more enter there are still only 3,000 in the park to buy food and souvenirs, no? Think about it.
yea but when those 3,000 leave and 3,000 new people enter they are still only serving 50,000 average attendees per day. I'm talking actual entrants to the park at any given moment can't exceed the 50,000 number you gave. They can't physically serve the additional 3,000 without first 3,000 leaving.
The only benefit to Disney here is the ticket purchases. They're not selling any more merch. or food because of this.
Revenue was also up 8%. You're splitting hairs now. People spend when they're in the parks, and they'll spend an average amount irrespective of how long they're there. Disney already knows this. Getting more people into the parks (even if that means people hopping or going back to a resort or just plain leaving) increases their revenue. The data they've already shared about how the program is working backs it up.


So wait - Disney was always expecting FP+ was going to increase the wait times across the parks? How had I missed that before? And how nice of Disney to design a new system that they expected to increase wait times. 
When I read he article all it made me think was lose-lose. Disney kept the SB wait the same and they have limited FP availability. Great we have gotten less than nothing out of this "big improvement". I'm thrilled.....
They really can't "cram" more people in the parks. There is a maximum capacity regardless of what fastpass system is used. This is why during the summer the entrance gates shut down occasionally. The parks can only hold so many people.
so how is that cramming "more" people into the park? if those 3,000 guests leave and 3,000 more enter there are still only 3,000 in the park to buy food and souvenirs, no? Think about it.
Revenue was also up 8%. You're splitting hairs now. People spend when they're in the parks, and they'll spend an average amount irrespective of how long they're there. Disney already knows this. Getting more people into the parks (even if that means people hopping or going back to a resort or just plain leaving) increases their revenue. The data they've already shared about how the program is working backs it up.
You also reaslize that ANY comparison of previous years Jan to this years Jan or even from week to week or day to day is meaningless without actual admitance numbers which Disney won't provide us, right?
For example - there is a higher number of visitors from South America this year. Apparently Jan has become the popular time for them since it's their summer time, Disney is growing in popularity, and the middle class is growing in numbers and influance.
The statistics from this blog would be useful if they were actually relevant. If they're only tracking posted wait times, thats not the actual wait time for the ride usually. Think of when you see Pirates as a 15 minute wait. 90% of the time its less than fifteen. Going by the posted time for the attraction won't tell you the exact wait time.
The Ops centers for the attractions don't post the exact wait time to the minute, so how could you measure if times were dropping by one minute?
Fastpass+ has lowered the wait times for attractions, and its more than just one minute for the big ones.
The statistics from this blog would be useful if they were actually relevant. If they're only tracking posted wait times, thats not the actual wait time for the ride usually. Think of when you see Pirates as a 15 minute wait. 90% of the time its less than fifteen. Going by the posted time for the attraction won't tell you the exact wait time.
The Ops centers for the attractions don't post the exact wait time to the minute, so how could you measure if times were dropping by one minute?
Fastpass+ has lowered the wait times for attractions, and its more than just one minute for the big ones.
The statistics from this blog would be useful if they were actually relevant. If they're only tracking posted wait times, thats not the actual wait time for the ride usually. Think of when you see Pirates as a 15 minute wait. 90% of the time its less than fifteen. Going by the posted time for the attraction won't tell you the exact wait time.
The Ops centers for the attractions don't post the exact wait time to the minute, so how could you measure if times were dropping by one minute?
Fastpass+ has lowered the wait times for attractions, and its more than just one minute for the big ones.
We just got back last night from a Seven day visit to the World, onsite. Our observation of the lines was that the occasional backups of the FP+ line was nearly always due to people just not understanding the system and how it works yet. People on the Disboards are staying pretty current on the vagaries of the system, so when we arrived, I understood exactly how the band readers worked, etc. My DH had a hard time using his band the first couple of times because he hadn't been reading up on it like I had. But we saw people who would move the band away before the Mickey went green, so they had to re-scan, or they thought the band was a "magic ticket" to every ride, and had to have it explained by the CM, or a party of 6 would go thru one at a time instead of using both scanners, even with the CMs trying to get them to use both. You would see a backup of FP+ guests waiting to be scanned, but then there would be no line inside the attraction.
We saw the worst backups outside Star Tours, but we finally figured out that a huge part of it was that the line backed way up during Jedi shows, because people in line would get caught up watching it and not pay attention to moving along in line.
Standby line times seemed pretty consistent with what we have seen before at similar crowd levels.
The lines that shocked me were the Day-Guest lines for getting FP+ reservations. At Epcot, the rope-drop crowd was considerably thinner for the first hour just because the FP+ Kioskd lines were sucking up so many people.
We never waited in a FP+ line, either inside or outside an attraction, for longer than 5-10 minutes total, which was also pretty standard for legacy FP.
Since when were character FP not intended to be part of the network? I know the FP I pulled for the princesses right after I pulled Mickey was part of the network.![]()


