If the cars are physically closer together then yes. If they're not then it has no baring on the throughput.Longer omnimovers would allow a higher amount of people on them though because more cars can be put on.
Having say 40 cars vs 30 would result in a higher number of people on board at one time.
Yes, that's how I understand it.Would it be fair to say that additional length does increase the capacity of an omnimover (in terms of how many it can physically hold at once), but not the throughput per unit time?
If you were to take a guess, what would your estimate be for each?I'd put money on Atlantis getting more than the quoted 1,240 and Schloss less than 2,050.
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It's funny how they actually say that in the video, without name dropping Voletarium of course.Seems Mack have learnt from their experience with Voletarium and developed their own flying theatre now. Quite an interesting concept.
Could they not mount 3 of these next to each other and get the same capacity per screen + the reverse loading?Interesting idea, though it probably won't improve capacity as most of the flying theatres built so far have nearly twice as many seats (per cycle, not total).
Having such a big moving base seems quite an engineering challenge, will be interesting to see how well it works in the real world.