- cross-posted to:
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- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
This technology looks legitimately impressive.
Here’s a video of it working: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3Sh6mu4zbs&t=1
This technology looks legitimately impressive.
Here’s a video of it working: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3Sh6mu4zbs&t=1
This thing is so technically complex and has so many moving parts that I can only imagine it breaking literally constantly and costing a fortune to repair whenever it does.
So, a Disneyland ride?
I can only assume the reason you’d work for Disney as either an engineer or technician is if you have a kink involving being in a constant and inescapable state of overworked frustration.
Depending on how exactly is it made, it could have fewer moving parts than it looks like. The tilt seems to be controlled on a whole module at a time level, and I’m guessing all the tops of a module might be rotating in the same direction. That would still leave a lot of linkages and bushings or bearings, but make it easily serviceable by just replacing them. The modular design seems to indicate you could pick a whole hexagon tile, replace it with a working one, and service the damaged one in the background.