Breck has been on my bucket list for a long time. Not because of the skiing, necessarily, but because its collection of 23 lifts is
among the most unique anywhere. Nowhere else can you find so many
lifts with turns (5), lifts that cross other lifts (4), not to mention
North America’s only double-loading detachable and its highest elevation
chairlift. This weekend I made a break for Breck and the three other
Colorado Vail Resorts to see what Epic is all about.
Even
with the option to ski back to town via the Four O’Clock ski run, the
BreckConnect is an immensely popular transportation solution.
I’ll start with the BreckConnect Gondola,
which first connected one end of town to Peaks 7 and 8 in 2006. The
Leitner-Poma gondola is free and operates both winter and summer. Locals
I talked to can no longer remember life without it. Although it has
two mid-stations each with an angle change of more than 40 degrees, the
entire system operates with one haul rope. It’s way cooler than taking a
bus from the parking lot. The Peak 8 SuperConnect links Peaks 9 and 8 with an angle station in between.
On the mountain, the Peak 8 SuperConnect
is another Poma detachable with an angle station. Its second stage
replaced Lift 4 in 2002 but Vail Resorts decided to start the lift way
over on Peak 9 to make it easier for guests to move laterally. Along
its route, the SuperConnect passes over both the Beaver Run SuperChair
and C-Chair before descending to the angle station. Loading gates at
the base leave some chairs empty for guests at the mid, where all chairs
briefly jog out and back into the alignment. From here, it’s a short
jaunt to the heart of Peak 8. Skiing under the light side of the T-Bar is strange; there’s nothing else around.
Then there’s the Horseshoe Bowl T-Bar,
better known simply as the T-Bar. This is the only Doppelmayr lift at
Breck, the land of Poma. It also makes a turn, but only on the heavy
side. As with the triangle Platter at
Sun Peaks Resort, the uphill side must be more carefully routed for
skiers, while the down bound side takes the straight path. To
accomplish this, the T-Bar has five bullwheels – three at the bottom,
one along the uphill path and one up top. Fortress Mountain, Alberta
had one of these as well. As we’ll see with Snowflake below, it’s much
easier to make a turn on only one side of a fixed-grip lift rather than
both sides. The T-Bar is a crowd favorite, serving some of Breck’s best
high-alpine bowls. Imperial SuperChair is not a long lift but introduced a huge amount of new terrain.
New on the above treeline scene is the Imperial SuperChair,
built in 2005. It’s one of those rare detachable lifts you must ride a
fixed-grip lift to get to, in this case either 6-Chair or the T-Bar.
Imperial tops out at 12,840 feet, making it the highest lift in North
America. At one point it even had both the Express and SuperChair
monikers. Now everyone just calls it Imperial. It was built with
storms in mind; most towers are beefed up with three-section tubes and
all but the first and last two have combo assemblies on both sides. A
detachable was selected so the chairs could be parked on a rail at the
bottom. Quicksilver has two separate mazes that never merge, each with its own loading ramp.
The Quicksilver Super6
carries on the legacy of the original Quicksilver lift, the world’s
first detachable quad. The next-generation is a 1999 Poma six-pack
servicing the heart of Breckenridge’s sprawling beginner complex. Due
to the clientele, the lift was designed with two 90-degree loading
platforms, each serving every other chair. Gates open and close between
each chair to send them to the proper place. As a result, this is the
only chairlift you’ll find that is permitted to have its chairs out of
order. Unfortunately, the lift still slows often and could use double
unloading ramps as well. 5-chair makes a subtle turn after tower 10.
An honorable mention goes to 5-Chair,
a Riblet double with a turn that’s not on the trail map. Using canted
sheaves, it makes a slight deflection over towers 10A-10B just before a
summer-only mid-station unload used for an alpine slide. A bunch more modern lifts
turn in this manner but 5 was to my knowledge the first. Judging from
the tower numbering, I’m guessing this turn was added sometime after
initial construction. The Snowflake monstrosity from above.
The mother of all Breck’s quirky lifts is a double chair named Snowflake.
It too has a mid-station but that’s not what makes it stand out. Just
after the mid-load, the heavy side makes a sweeping right turn using
horizontal sheaves. Unfortunately Poma engineers couldn’t do the same
on the light side so they had to design two bullwheels and two crossings
for the downhill side. It is hard to understand without seeing it. As
such, if you enjoy reading this blog, a trip to Breckenridge is a must!
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