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How do they secure ski lifts on glaciers?

 Poster: A snowHead
Poster: A snowHead
Glaciers are constantly moving downhill so do they have to uproot the lifts and move them back to where they started from every so often? Or are they all built on solid rock outcrops?
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Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
Have you got an example?
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 Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
They have huge ice anchors that are dug into the glacier. The lift station then has a long take up platform to allow for glacier movement.

Saas-Fee even have one with the lift station at the bottom, and the moving ice anchor at the top.
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@Feast, The drag lifts on the Saas-Fee glacier for example.

@leggyblonde, my vague understanding is that they can be on movable platforms and get adjusted through the course of time.
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It's because glaciers are constantly moving that they use T bars. Which do have to be repositioned sometimes, yes - watched the process on one of the lifts at Les Deux Alpes some years ago. Interesting.
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The tower bases are built on wheels and during summer teams of specially trained marmottes pull the pylons uphill. When they are in place the lift cables are anchored, the lift motors started, and the lift stations are dragged by their own cables to their new position. Simples.. Toofy Grin
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Then you can post your own questions or snow reports...
I'd love to see them being moved and those ice anchors!

I'd also like a specially trained marmotte, can they do the hoovering?
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 After all it is free Go on u know u want to!
After all it is free Go on u know u want to!
No, but I think they can be used to wash dishes, but they get very soggy, very quickly.
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Have a look at this small glacier drag lift to see one solution
http://youtube.com/v/H7kBtJ8q0Xo The mounting points are on rocky outcrops either side of the glacier.
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@MikeM, You have to train them to hold their breath first. It's not a fun process neither for the groundhogs nor the trainer. But most entertaining to watch from a safe distance.
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Didn't one of the pylons on the Rosolin T-bar on the glacier at Tignes fall over a few years ago? I know that lift derailed a couple of years ago because the cable went out of line.
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And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports.
I have seen the pylons of Saas-Fee T-bars bent (and the lift closed of course), when a section of the glacier moved much faster than expected, dragging the lift out of shape.

Also of course, some of the pylons are heavily tensioned to pull the transport cable down to the correct level, where the lift follows a flat to steep profile, rather than a steady gradient.

They also get taken out by unexpectedly large avalanches.
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@MikeM, The marmot method works fine in the summer, but of course they hibernate in the winter, so are not available.

They tend to use subtle tools like this in the winter months http://www.robert-aebi.com/site/index.cfm?id_art=98862&vsprache=DE
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 You know it makes sense.
You know it makes sense.
leggyblonde wrote:
Glaciers are constantly moving downhill so do they have to uproot the lifts and move them back to where they started from every so often? Or are they all built on solid rock outcrops?



Most glacier lifts use a hybrid of fixed and "floating" pylons.

Some pylons are fixed to rock or permafrost, while some float on the ice.

For example, the Furgg chairlift in Zermatt has 12 of its 18 pylons actually standing on the glacier ice. And they are repositioned every so often after surveying with a theodolite.
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 Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:
Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:
johnE wrote:
Have a look at this small glacier drag lift to see one solution
http://youtube.com/v/H7kBtJ8q0Xo The mounting points are on rocky outcrops either side of the glacier.


Solution? @ 40 secs they fall over backwards Toofy Grin
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Poster: A snowHead
@johnE, Laughing Laughing Laughing
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Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
How do they secure ski lifts on glaciers?

They lock the door a the end of the day of course. rolling eyes
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 Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
The Panorama Lift in Saas Fee can move as much as a metre in a couple of weeks. Depending on the glacier it is usually re-aligned every 10 days or so.
It takes an experienced team about 3 hours to complete.
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@johnE, I have been on that lift its called the "Roca Jack" & is Not on a Glacier !
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@stanton, You are correct, but the structural problem is the same. They were unable to fix pylons at the top or on route at a cost they were prepared to pay. I thought that this was because the snow field was more or less permanent.
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In Saas Fee they are using floating pylons for the t bars at the top. I have seen them being moved by the technicians and it is quick and efficient.
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Quote:

The Panorama Lift in Saas Fee can move as much as a metre in a couple of weeks. Depending on the glacier it is usually re-aligned every 10 days or so.

It takes an experienced team about 3 hours to complete.



I would love to see that.
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