I wonder why they are asking for pre books if not to apply a cap? Potentially to manage the rap throughout per ride to ensure it matches the proportion of people with RAPs on park? So if the sold tickets are 10 percent RAP the RAP que takes roughly 10 percent of the seats?
And unlike the main queue where the app would state "queue at capacity", you wouldn't know a RAP queue was at capacity until you got to it.What are they trying to achieve by closing RAP queues though? Instead of some people complaining about waiting too long, lots of people will be complaining about not being allowed to ride.
And unlike the main queue where the app would state "queue at capacity", you wouldn't know a RAP queue was at capacity until you got to it.
I think a major issue with RAP is that some people are simply unable to queue for one reason or another. We are in a ridiculous situation where people are routinely joining long physical queues to get a RAP time. Because of the massive influx of people now using RAP's (a system introduces to make the park accessible and inclusive) we are effectively excluding the people that [arguably] need it the most.What are they trying to achieve by closing RAP queues though? Instead of some people complaining about waiting too long, lots of people will be complaining about not being allowed to ride.
Here's a question for genuine RAP users: would you welcome a cap?
I mean, I get the annoyance if the allocation is full, however, knowing that you are going to receive the support you require efficiently has got to be a massive plus?
I suspect the poor person who was confronted by a barrage of questions over a desk simply gave the answers the person wanted to hear, save them any griefBut but but, apparently it was confirmed by a passholder group that RAP numbers per day were being capped (a couple of weeks ago). Why are we getting different information? This is pretty pathetic. Like I said recently, all that could be taken from the recent official announcement was that they've put an extra layer of booking in for people to get their RAP pass for the day, which doesn't actually achieve anything, apart from inconvenience.
I suspect the poor person who was confronted by a barrage of questions over a desk simply gave the answers the person wanted to hear, save them any grief
Alternative solutions in my mind also include a max 1 carer limit instead of 3
So there's not really a "cap" as such then.