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Yan Lift

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Lift Engineering & Mfg. Co.
IndustryAerial lift manufacturer
Founded1965
Carson City, Nevada, United States
Defunct1996
FateBankrupt
HeadquartersCarson City, Nevada, United States
Key people
Jan K. Kunczynski
Les Okreglak
ProductsSki lifts, Rails (Funicular, Monorail)
The nameplate found on Lift Engineering's ski lifts.

Yan Lift, incorporated as Lift Engineering & Mfg. Co., was a major ski lift manufacturer in North America. Founded in 1965 and based in Carson City, Nevada, the company built at least 200 fixed-grip chairlifts,[citation needed] as well as 31 high-speed quads.[1] The company's lifts have been involved in the deaths of five people and the injury of at least 70, the worst record of any ski-lift maker operating in North America.

The firm came under scrutiny by state safety officials after a fatal incident in 1985. After a series of equipment failures, Yan Lifts were outlawed in certain states including California and Colorado. The company later filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 1996 after multiple other incidents resulting in 3 deaths.[2]. Eventually, Yan Lifts manufactured new track and cables for the Angels Flight funicular, but the company, now called YanTrak, went out of business in 2001 after a major accident.[3][4]

The last detachable chairlift made fully designed and built by Yan, La Roca, located at Espot Esquí, closed in 2019 after failure leading to one of the chairs falling off the line occurred.[5][6]

Only one Lift Engineering Detachable remains, found at the Nazhvan Forest Park in Iran.

History

1965–85

Lift Engineering was founded by Janek Kunczynski, a Polish immigrant and former ski racer who initially worked at Poma. He left Poma in 1965 and founded the company Lift Engineering to build his own ski lifts. One of his first customers was Squaw Valley. The name "Yan" is the English spelling of his first name, and the brand under which Kunczynski sold his lifts.

The company grew through the 1970s and 1980s. Kunczynski was known for dining with prospective clients (après-ski) instead of just simple negotiating, and would sketch plans out on paper napkins.[7] Another attractive feature to buyers was the price. Kunczynski sold his lifts at prices well below those of larger manufacturers. Kunczynski is also credited with being the first manufacturer of ski lifts to incorporate aesthetics into the design of his equipment, creating sleek designs that were popular with ski resorts.[8]

The company is most noted for designing fixed-grip chairlifts[citation needed]. Kunczynski created a standard system that was intended to be simple to operate and maintain. For example, Yan operator booths contain only two switches: a switch that stops and starts the lift, and one that selects its speed. The main controls were placed in a separate machine room. Lift Engineering was the first company to design and build its own low-voltage DC motor control tailored specifically to the ski lift industry (System 4200 and later Base 10). Yan's tower designs were also overbuilt, meaning that it is possible to turn a triple chair into a fixed quad just by changing the chairs.

An example of a Yan fixed-grip chairlift;
the removed Catskinner triple chair (Ex Lift 4) at Blackcomb, B.C.

1985–95

Lift Engineering entered a new market of high-speed detachable chairlifts in the 1980s. Whereas other ski lift firms spent as much as four years developing these lifts, Yan installed its first after only one year of research and development, at June Mountain in California.[9]

By the late 1980s, Lift Engineering was one of the largest suppliers of ski lifts based in North America.

Lift Engineering also was an important player in the funitel market in the late 1980s. The quad mono cable, or QMC, was invented by Kunczynski (US Patent 4,848,241). The lift consisted of four separate loops of cable, strung between the upper and lower stations. Two cables were run in the uphill direction, and two were run in the downhill direction. The cabins would be mounted between the cables. But, because the cables were looped, once the cabins reached the upper station, the cables would loop back downhill not carrying a load. Only one of these lifts was ever built, and first opened to the public in 1988 at June Mountain.[10] The owners allegedly had difficulty getting the cables to run in synchronicity. The lift also developed the same grip problems that occurred on the Yan high-speed quads, and ceased operation in 1996.

Controversies and accidents

Despite questions about safety, Yan managed to sell a total of 31 high-speed quads in the United States and Canada. Many of the lifts have been retrofitted by companies such as Poma and Doppelmayr. A controversial figure, Yanek Kunczynksi was a Polish immigrant and figurehead of the company. He brought experience from French chair lift making company, Poma to his American company: Lift Engineering. He was known for taking away what he deemed as unnecessary parts and substituting certain equipment for others, examples of this include replacing aluminum towers for steel ones and swapping rubber rings for steel coils.[2] Many blame him for the accidents, though he claims that bad maintenance are the culprits for the lift failures.[2]

Yan high speed lifts were notorious for their grip slippage and sometimes required hours of running in the morning to realign the chairs following slippage over night. This led to nicknames such as "Yankee Slipper" a play on the lifts actual name "Yankee Clipper" now known as the Grand Summit Express at Mount Snow, Vermont.

Keystone, Colorado, accident (1985)

Potential problems with Yan lifts began to surface as early as 1985, when the upper bullwheel on the Teller lift at Keystone Ski Resort in Colorado disconnected from the main gearbox shaft. The lift was unique in its design as there was no support underneath the bullwheel. Lift Engineering had explained when the lift first opened the year before that a support beam underneath was not necessary. They claimed the pressure of the system along with the welds would keep the bullwheel in place.[11] Faulty welding would be blamed for the accident.[12] Two people were killed and 47 injured.[13] The Teller lift, and its twin lift, Santiago, were two triple chairlifts constructed in 1984 as part of Keystone's North Peak expansion. Teller was rebuilt by Yan and renamed the Ruby lift, free of charge. Santiago was replaced by a Doppelmayr high speed quad in 1998 and relocated to Big Sky, Montana, while Ruby was replaced by a Poma high speed six pack in 2000.[citation needed]

During the late 1980s, the Colorado Passenger Tramway Safety Board began to question the safety of Yan's lifts. They learned that Kunczynski, in his drive to build affordable ski lifts, regularly sent steel parts to be welded together in ski area parking lots.[12] The Board alleged that Kunczynski's lifts were unsafe. The ski industry blasted the Board and continued to install Yan lifts.[citation needed]

Sierra Ski Ranch, (Currently Known As: Sierra-At-Tahoe) California, accident (1993)

On April 4, 1993, a 9-year old boy was killed and another child injured when loose bolts and a subsequent derailment caused two chairs to stack up on Sierra Ski Ranch’s Slingshot lift.  The same lift had sent an empty chair to the ground two months prior when a grip failed.  Lift Engineering settled a wrongful-death suit after the accident for $1.9 million. Sierra Ski Ranch’s marketing director would later state, “we found they just didn’t withstand the test of time” when the company committed $6 million to replace its three Yan detachables in 1996.[1]

Whistler, British Columbia, accident (1995)

Yan detachable lifts were subject to a series of accidents, most notably the Quicksilver lift at Whistler Mountain in British Columbia, Canada. The Quicksilver accident killed two and injured eight on December 23, 1995.[14] The accident occurred when the emergency stop was used repeatedly. A chair started sliding downhill and struck the next chair which got stuck on a tower. This continued several times before a total of four chairs fell.[15] The main problems with the Yan high-speed lifts were the chair grips.[citation needed] These were designed so that in order to stay connected to the cable, the chair had to be subject to gravity. The Yan grips, unlike most operating today, did not have high-tension coil springs, but rather rubber "marshmallow" springs that exerted much less force on the cable. The repeated emergency brake application was enough to shake the chairs free of the cable. The majority of government safety inspectors failed to detect these problems.[citation needed]

The Quicksilver chairlift, which served the Whistler Creekside base area, was replaced by the Creekside Gondola in 1997, built by Poma.[citation needed]

Aftermath

Following the accident at Whistler, and reports of grip-slipping at a plethora of other mountains, 15 resorts spent millions of dollars either upgrading, or completely replacing their combined 31 detachable quads in the United States and Canada.[1] June Mountain, the only mountain to use Yan's type 7 grips in a funitel was forced to shut down the QMC Funitel leaving sole access to the mountain to the J1 lift (A 1960 Riblet double Chair). Doppelmayr, the company that took majority of the replacement contracts was so stretched in resources that 75% of their replacement grips came from Austria instead of their North American manufacturing plant.

POL-X West developed a new version of the YAN-7 detachable grip, the one that was used on the majority of the high-speed lifts, replacing the marshmallow springs with high-tension springs. The redesign was ordered by a group of British Columbia and Alberta ski resorts that included Silver Star and Lake Louise. This grip also proved unsatisfactory and the lifts were removed from 2002–2004.

Many resorts suffered greatly from the economic burden of having to replace their workhorse lifts, such as Schweitzer which went bankrupt as a result, and Sun Valley who had 7 Yan High Speed Quads. In 2019, the second last Yan high speed quad La Roca, located at Espot Esqui in Spain, suffered a catastrophic failure leading to one of the chairs falling off the line. This chairlift had Type 7 grips and the original terminals with replaced chairs. As a result of this, the lift was shut down. On 6 December 2019, Espot opened their new La Roca high-speed quad, built by Leitner.[5] The last Yan lift remaining is in Iran and uses the POL-X West grips. There are still many fixed grip lifts around the U.S. and Canada that are made by Yan.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Landsman, Peter (2016-03-15). "Yan High Speed Quad Retrofits 20 Years Later". Lift Blog. Retrieved 2020-02-23.
  2. ^ a b c TCSP. "History of Yanek Kunczynski". www.coloradoskihistory.com. Retrieved 2018-01-07.
  3. ^ "Uncontrolled Movement, Collision, and Passenger Fatality on the Angels Flight Railway in Los Angeles, California February 1, 2001" (PDF). 2011-10-22. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-10-22. Retrieved 2019-10-07.
  4. ^ Mandell, Jason. "No AngelHow Did an Engineer With a History of Fatal Accidents Get Hired to Build the Bunker Hill Railway?". Los Angeles Downtown News - The Voice of Downtown Los Angeles. Retrieved 2020-02-23.
  5. ^ a b M, Ivan. "Espot está cerrada y sin fecha de apertura por un fallo en un telesilla". Nevasport.com (in Spanish). Retrieved 2020-02-23.
  6. ^ "TSD 4 Roca". Remontees Mecaniques. 2020-02-23. Retrieved 2020-02-23.
  7. ^ Markels, Alex (1997-01-16). "The Rise, Fall and Return of a Ski-Lift Entrepreneur". The Wall Street Journal. Dow Jones & Company. Retrieved 2008-02-29.
  8. ^ "The History of Yanek Kunczynski". The Wall Street Journal. 16 January 1997. Retrieved 30 July 2010 – via Colorado Ski History.
  9. ^ "Yan High Speed Quad Retrofits 20 Years Later". Retrieved 5 April 2022.
  10. ^ "QMC Debuts at June Mountain". Retrieved 5 April 2022.
  11. ^ Johnson, Brad. "Over 30 years ago, Keystone lift accident left 2 dead, 49 injured (Summit Daily archive)". www.summitdaily.com. Retrieved 2022-02-27.
  12. ^ a b "Faulty Weld Is Blamed For Ski Lift Accident". The New York Times. 1985-12-18. Retrieved 2008-02-29.
  13. ^ Johnson, Brad (2010-12-14). "Keystone lift accident was 25 years ago this week". Summit Daily. Retrieved 2015-03-22.
  14. ^ Nixon, Emily (April 2004). "Disaster and Emergency Management: The Quicksilver Chairlift Incident" (PDF). University of Victoria, Geography Department. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-04-08. Retrieved 2015-03-17.
  15. ^ Pyn, Larry (2008-02-09). "Minimizing the risks on B.C.'s ski lifts". The Vancouver Sun. Canwest Interactive. Retrieved 2008-02-29.