I look at how complicated D-Lines are and I can just see that in the long term they'll be far much more of a hassle to maintain than the very old Doppelmayr's from the 1970's and the 1980's. Those lifts are just too rare now... Doppelmayr D-Lines are nothing but complicated mass-produced bland pieces of scrap. Modern ropeways have absolutely nothing special to them at all especially when they have nothing mechanically different to each other and that you see them everywhere... You don't see singular specific old ropeway systems everywhere. They're all mechanically different and they weren't mass produced. Many different manufacturers existed back then as well which also contributes to the variety of old ropeways compared to that of modern ones. Modern ones have NO variety at all... Also look at how long the old ones last without design defects. I see a lot of potential for electrical defect in the D-Lines in the long term!
@@RickRollDetector What? You think it's OK to belittle and discriminate against people who hate modern lifts just for preferring the old ones? Those companies are tyrants either way. It's my right to say what I want against the evil modern lift manufacturers who do nothing but destroy the interesting lifts and put up bland mass-produced shit in their place for the sake of more money and making people more lazy. And they come up with so many retarded reasons to enforce their destruction and they lobby governmental authorities into imposing needless and strict laws that don't need to exist in their favour. Why does there need to be so much hate against the old lifts? Why can't people appreciate that the old lifts are works of art and have mechanical differences that modern ones NEVER have? Out of all of the things that people could have so much hatred against, why old ski lifts?
Very cool lift. But that old phone at 1:00 killed me xD
Awesome video 🙌👍😊👌🙏
Can you do a start up video on this lift? it would be cool
Look at this one. czcams.com/video/uxHNDitjPug/video.html
@@larsvognild5631 New one would be cool. Test stops too
Люди смотрят твои видео, но почти никто не подписывается
I look at how complicated D-Lines are and I can just see that in the long term they'll be far much more of a hassle to maintain than the very old Doppelmayr's from the 1970's and the 1980's. Those lifts are just too rare now...
Doppelmayr D-Lines are nothing but complicated mass-produced bland pieces of scrap. Modern ropeways have absolutely nothing special to them at all especially when they have nothing mechanically different to each other and that you see them everywhere...
You don't see singular specific old ropeway systems everywhere. They're all mechanically different and they weren't mass produced. Many different manufacturers existed back then as well which also contributes to the variety of old ropeways compared to that of modern ones. Modern ones have NO variety at all...
Also look at how long the old ones last without design defects. I see a lot of potential for electrical defect in the D-Lines in the long term!
oh well. the same guy who commented on TheTimmy376's video and wants to get rid of doppelmayr, leitner, poma and bartholet
@@RickRollDetector What? You think it's OK to belittle and discriminate against people who hate modern lifts just for preferring the old ones?
Those companies are tyrants either way. It's my right to say what I want against the evil modern lift manufacturers who do nothing but destroy the interesting lifts and put up bland mass-produced shit in their place for the sake of more money and making people more lazy. And they come up with so many retarded reasons to enforce their destruction and they lobby governmental authorities into imposing needless and strict laws that don't need to exist in their favour.
Why does there need to be so much hate against the old lifts? Why can't people appreciate that the old lifts are works of art and have mechanical differences that modern ones NEVER have? Out of all of the things that people could have so much hatred against, why old ski lifts?