Doors don’t dangle below the track if a hinge is messed up.The door didn't fall off - the hinge was messed up and had to be fixed - you might want to correct your title OP!
Yeah, that was Disney's story. But the photo showed half the door hanging below the beam. I don't know whether it was still hanging on by a hinge, but it definitely wasn't anywhere close to where it was supposed to be. Guess it depends on your definition of "falling off".The door didn't fall off - the hinge was messed up and had to be fixed - you might want to correct your title OP!
I saw that same photo!!! If I can see the door hanging below the monorail beam, it's fallen off!!! May still be attached by one measly hinge but it's still off and guests would have been in danger.Yeah, that was Disney's story. But the photo showed half the door hanging below the beam. I don't know whether it was still hanging on by a hinge, but it definitely wasn't anywhere close to where it was supposed to be. Guess it depends on your definition of "falling off".
Guests underneath at the GF were definitely in danger if they would have been walking or standing underneath that section of the monorail.I saw that same photo!!! If I can see the door hanging below the monorail beam, it's fallen off!!! May still be attached by one measly hinge but it's still off and guests would have been in danger.
If your transportation system relies on guests always being 100% compliant, you have a problem.When we were there in September they made an announcement each time we were on the monorail about not leaning on the doors. I don't remember this in our previous visits. Guests must have been causing things to happen with the doors.
Here's the post in question...If you look at the thread on rumors and news - apparently someone had a kid on their lap on an ecv and drove up the ramp and into the door. They have a thorough explanation of how the door came off in that thread.
Here is the report I have...
A guest utilizing an ECV with a child in their lap lost control coming up the ramp and hit the door full speed. The door initially bucked from the train after the impact and the cast quickly deadheaded the car and notified maintenance. While trying to realign the door and secure it for the train to travel to MK for a further inspection the door came disconnected from the top actuator arm and fell down. There was no guests in the car at that time. From there the train was deadheaded and put out of service. Nothing failed on the train or was damaged. The door was pushed up during impact, the bottom actuator was bent up and the top slipped off of its mounting point.
This was by all accounts the guests doing. Surely the door may have been weak but a guest should not have a child on their lap while driving an ECV.If your transportation system relies on guests always being 100% compliant, you have a problem.
Don't even get me started. I had my foot run over in DL because Grandma was letting the toddler sit on her lap. And when I screamed she berated me for making the baby cry!And let us not forget that if you're on an ECV, you aren't supposed to have anyone on your lap!!!