Showing posts with label kevin doherty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kevin doherty. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Trip Report Pt. 2: Soundsational, DCA, and More!



When I last left you, I was jockeying for position to watch one of my favorite parades in years, Soundsational! A perfect blend of Disney character favorites and the whimsical stylings of Kevin Kidney and Jody Daily. My picture taking began in the Aladdin portion of the parade. Bring on the dancing girls!



Ariel blew kisses from above:



The Princess that started it all was on hand to wave to her grateful admirers in the crowd:



A particularly lovely Cinderella:



The styling of this bird just screams Kevin & Jody; in a good way!



Down at the Bayou, Princess Tiana was especially joyful and energetic:



The Princess and the Frog Showboat is one of my favorite set pieces from this parade. So much to see and admire, it is adorned with wonderful details.





Tink looked feisty as ever:



As the sun began to set, Mary & Bert were perfectly illuminated by the golden glow of the late afternoon, making it a perfectly Jolly Holiday:







After the parade, I made my way over to the other side, aka DCA.



Be sure to look at every square inch of Buena Vista Street; there are many gags and details for you to enjoy.



As I sauntered down the main boulevard of Hollywood Land, The Five and Dime car was driving by:



Quite surprisingly, I noticed that the Mad T Party was already occurring...in daylight!



Although it seems a lot more fun at night, I still enjoyed listening to the band play some of my favorite dance tunes while the enthusiastic crowd packed the floor below:









Across the way, I took a journey through The Sorcerer's Workshop in the Animation Building:





This is a hidden gem at DCA; unless told about it, I doubt that the average guest would stumble upon it on their own.





With all kinds of cool lights and crazy contraptions, you feel as if you have discovered a secret cave that begs to be explored.





It was hard for me to believe that in all the years I've been going to Disneyland, I h ad never really taken the time to photograph this beautiful area.



See Aladdin in the light fixture?



All the chairs were full as guests interacted with the touch screens to see which Disney character they most resembled:





The movie at the Crest Theater has been changed from "Snow White" to "Fantasia"; The El Capitan is still showing "Pinocchio." No changes in the last 11 years for the El Cap—"Pinocchio" must be doing well!



I was going to take the Red Car Trolley back to the new "hub" of DCA, but it was already full. Instead, I put my camera to use!



NEXT UP: Cars Land and Carthay!

See more vintage and current Disneyland/DCA photos on my Disneyland web pages.

Wednesday, August 04, 2010

Kevin Doherty & The PeopleMover Project



There are Disneyland souvenirs, and then there are holy grails; pieces of the actual park. The kinds of things that bring back cherished memories of something that is no longer able to be experienced in the present. Kevin Doherty recently contacted me and alerted me to a WAAAAAAAAAAAY cool project that he has been slaving away at. Here is his story:

For as long as I can remember, I’ve had an interest in Walt’s concept for Disneyland as a location where children and adults can have fun, interact, and LEARN together. A unique concept in entertainment…and in business. To be able to make it happen—in the 1950’s—and flourish all these years still amazes me. Yes, times have changed and there have been good years and bad, but the Park and the Company Walt Disney put together has somehow survived, and even flourished into an entirely new Theme Park Industry. We sometimes forget just how unique Walt’s dreams were for the time.

As “rides” come and go at Amusement parks (though they are so similar as not to notice), “Attractions” (especially Disney Attractions) seem to live on even after a very successful life span. People—young and old—fondly remember their first ride on Dumbo, The Matterhorn, Big Thunder Mountain, Space and Splash Mountains; and “veterans” feel privileged to be able to reminisce about The Flying Saucers, The Skyway, The Viewliner, Astro Jets, and The PeopleMover. The Disney Company has allowed some of these “retired” ride vehicles to be placed in the hands of “regular” folks.



I remember sitting in a PeopleMover vehicle in the 1970’s when I was a young adult and being intrigued by the “Speedramps” and the automatically opening doors and tops. The relaxing excursion through Tomorrowland with the running commentary from Jack Wagner (what a voice). During the day, they provided an escape from the crowds and heat on the asphalt; in the evening, the cool night air, usually music and sometimes, fireworks! Whether alone in a car (sometimes talking across to people you didn’t even know) or sharing it with a special “friend” (maybe that you just met, dancing at the Tomorrowland Terrace) always a very good attraction to go on—D-ticket or free.

It never came to mind back then that someday I’d actually be able to have a PeopleMover vehicle of my own but the day came! Since then, another came my way and even better: after a trade, the 2 PeopleMovers I got are sister cars; probably the only 2 surviving cars that are together now and were together at the start in 1967.

I’ve gotten a couple of other attraction vehicles, but these are my “Rolls Royces.” I’ve spent time, money and energy to restore and preserve them; not just for me, but for others who share and hopefully understand their importance. I believe that these “Park Wheels” are not only a piece of our “childhoods”, but they are a piece of American History which should be cared for, displayed, and enjoyed.



A HISTORY OF TWO CARS

In 1966 a guy named Bob Gurr was asked by a guy named Walt to design a ride vehicle that could give an overview of a totally upgraded Tomorrowland section of The Disneyland Park. The locomotion of this attraction would be based on something designed for the 1965 Worlds Fair for the Ford Motor Company Pavilion. No separate vehicle motors, the cars would be carried along by motors and tires spaced in the roadway. Bob worked on this and came up with a design based on (believe it or not) a Cadillac and a soap dish. 248 separate cars in 4 car-trains would follow an elevated track through and around Tomorrowland in a relaxing overview of the Park.

One of these Trains was a bright yellow: train numbered #10. The two middle cars (#10B and #10C) moved excited visitors along the track, through “Monsanto”, “Carousel of Progress,” and “America the Beautiful” from 1967 to 1976. These 2 workhorses cycled their tops and doors every 18 minutes, carrying about a half million people around this track during that time.

In 1976 the attraction was closed because of the building of Space Mountain, and something happened to train #10; three of the Cars (10A, 10B, and 10D) ended up on display at the entry of the turntable, high above the crowd for part of this year. No one I can find knows why only 3 of the 4 car train ended on display or what was going on with 10C at that time, but we do know that 10B and 10C were reunited and placed back in service as they were part of the 1987 PeopleMover “re-paint” and got a new coat of silver/white with a bright Blue stripe.



In 1995 the PeopleMover was “retired”. Cars 10B and 10C had performed and shown about another half million guests Tomorrowland from above. That’s a total estimate of 1 Million guests between the 2 vehicles! The track fell silent and the constant feeling of motion and interest that the PeopleMovers brought to Tomorrowland was gone.

The PeopleMover vehicles were brought train by train into the now vacant Carousel of Progress/America Sings building to be “butchered”. A harsh word but it describes the process. The cutting off of the white fiberglass tops, tipping them over the side into waiting dumpsters. The cutting out of the aluminum towers and trim. The removal of the stainless guard rails and then the fiberglass skin to get to the steel frame. All thrown over the upper level track, sorted into waiting dumpsters below. It was necessary to make way for the new—but still very sad and depressing. Like losing a friend.

But somehow, again, 10B and 10C were spared and set aside in a “bone yard” along with a few others and some Astro Jets. They sat there waiting their fate, which was to get a “fresh” coat of dark Blue paint and be striped with fluorescent orange tape!



In 1998, the old PeopleMover cars 10B and 10C found themselves “on stage” again as representatives of a now gone Tomorrowland Transit Authority mode of transport. A “preview” before you rode “Rocket-Rods”. A disappointing attraction. Good ideas, poor execution. Mostly due to “money control.” Well, Rocket-Rods had issues and didn’t last very long. Cars 10B and 10C were “out of a job” again and sent to Burbank to sit in a back lot, in the weather, forgotten perhaps?

No, someone at Disney got the bright idea (I’m not being sarcastic) that maybe there was a market for all this old stuff they had hanging around and maybe eBay could help. In 2002 Disney brought out their “stuff” and among the first on the “auction block” were PeopleMovers 10B and 10C. Still dirty and scratched-up, on old pallets, PeopleMover 10C was sold first and a month later 10B.

I was lucky enough to get 10B and after a year of thought, I got into a “restoration” project. I was (am still) amazed at what Bob Gurr had created. Simple mechanism. All mechanical (no silly electric motors or fancy hydraulics. No computers!) and designed to do its thing for a long long time. The lack of wear on any moving part was amazing. Over their operating life, these doors and top had worked—every 18 minutes, for over 25 years, having about 500,000 people sit in this very vehicle.

Like a rare car restoration, we dismantled everything, cleaned, re-painted (returning it to the original yellow) and greased all. We even put in a small electric motor (sorry Bob) to duplicate the doors and top movement and a car stereo so we could even play Jack Wagner’s “PeopleMover” spiel. We placed it all on a pedestal and showed it off to fellow Disney enthusiasts. I still remember at one show allowing a dad and son—maybe 8 or 9 (too young to have ever ridden the attraction) - sit in it as the dad described the ride in detail, listening to the spiel, while the son listened to him reminisce. That made the project worth it.

All bright and shiny, Car 10B sat in our back yard. We’d have dinner in it. Overlooking the trees and grass, on cool nights, is always relaxing and brings back memories.

PeopleMover 10C had a tougher time of it, though. Something happened on the original eBay purchase and the sale wasn’t concluded. Someone at Disney decided it wasn’t worth much and so sold poor 10C as scrap! It was shipped to Florida, sitting on its original dirty old pallet. There a visitor from California saw it and negotiated a sale. It was shipped back to California and sat waiting its fate. After a few years, it was sold to another person and shipped to Hollywood, again to sit outside, waiting.

After the 50th Birthday of Disneyland, there was an auction. At this auction four of the few remaining PeopleMover cars owned by the Company were up for grabs. One of these was bought by a friend of mine. I called and congratulated him on his purchase, jokingly cursing him for now having two rare PeopleMovers. His response shocked me “I didn’t buy it for me, I bought it for you” he said! I was intrigued to say the least, as he already had a PeopleMover car and cared for Park ride vehicles as much as I did, he suggested that we might fix it up and make some money by finding a good home for this car if I didn’t really want it. I had a different idea and suggested I buy it from him so as to be able to trade with the owner of 10C. That would re-unite PeopleMovers # 10B and # 10C—the longest performing “on-stage” PeopleMovers—together, again! How cool would that be???!!!

He agreed and after almost a year of negotiations with the 10C owner (which included a car from Space Mountain) we did the trade and got 10B and 10C together again, in my back yard!

This was January 13th, 2008. Time went by—projects came and went—and, research on PeopleMovers and other attraction vehicles went on.

Below is a photo of Bob Gurr & Kevin:



The “turning point” was October 10, 2009 when Bob Gurr accepted my invitation to visit my home. Wow! The information that guy remembers! “Wheels”—especially attraction wheels—have been a big part of Disneyland’s success, and Bob Gurr was the guy who made all those wheels a reality. The name Classic Park Wheels Association was suggested by Bob Gurr during this gathering, which included Imagineers, prototypers, and my fabricator. Bob answered questions, referencing my copy of the repair manual. His visit motivated me and right after Christmas, we started stripping, cleaning, cataloging, buying parts and steel, cutting, welding, sanding, priming, and painting.

THE “SERIOUS” BUILD

A friend had initially put the idea in my head that though all the original PeopleMover “lower chassis” (with the ride wheels and the Board that pushed them along) had been destroyed in the 90’s, it’d be fun to duplicate one and run it on a railed track. The concept was to do a “mock-up” by measuring the design from the maintenance manual and of course, Bob Gurr’s comments. We’d use structural steel and add plastic wheels and cheap threaded rod. Well, after design, we were finding that the cost to get the stronger wheels or the better axels wasn’t that much. I remember standing looking at the first weld-up and wheel set with the fabricator and at the same time, we looked at each other and said “you know—I bet this thing will actually run on a track”.
Very cool.

500 man hours later, the 10C wheel chassis and car frame was complete and tested. It was June, 2010. The fiberglass body has gone out for repair—sand and paint.

Now it was car 10B’s turn for a new chassis and a “face-lift.” It took 4 hours to strip the 10B fiberglass, stainless and aluminum. Color coded (so the parts could go back on the same cars) the parts and frame traveled to the shop.

UPDATE 6/30/2010 Turned out that 10B “under the skin” was in pretty good shape, considering it had been 5 years since we did it… and, most of that time it was outdoors in all the weather. Rust had set in on the moving parts- not badly – but we decided to wire-brush everything and give it all a fresh coat of paint. We even color-coded the parts as we did on 10C.

I had 3 friends help that first day and BOY did they help. By the end of a long day, we had dismantled, cleaned and primer-coated all the parts. We cut the 2 pieces of inch and a half plywood, including the slight “curves on all ends. These “push-plates” were used to come in contact with the wheels in the roadway (Go-Go GoodYear!) and “push” the vehicles along. I was surprised when Bob Gurr had informed me these push-plates were just plywood. “Keep it simple – easily and cheaply replaced”. With some definite “pushing” from my friends to go on (boy was I tired after the first 10 hours)…. We even lined-up 10B with the cut steel and welded all the basic parts to the lower chassis…. Which I had planned to do a week later…

I was reviewing the PeopleMover “Maintenance and Repair” manual and looked at the pages about the control panels (there were 3). One console had a GREAT basic map with red lamps on it (for security) and another had a telephone and microphone (for the PA system). Son-of-a-gun—there’s a parts list with non-Disney part numbers. I wondered if these parts were still available? I googled the Electro-Voice Microphone part number and son-of-a-gun! I found an old stock microphone – in the box! And, then found lamps, switches and buttons all the exact parts used on these Consoles—thank goodness for the internet!

So, I think the next “project” will be duplicating a PeopleMover Console. I might even get it to actually open/close the doors and start the lights and sound on 10B and 10C —how cool would that be?

Moving on…it’s not July as yet and we’re very close to wrapping up the mechanicals. found a couple of “oop’s” like welding the “feet and wheels on 10B backwards (had to cut and re-weld) and cut one plywood push-plate 1 inch too short (we’ll fix).

We did finish the Tow Bar that holds the 2 vehicles together. The original design was specially build and very hard (expensive) to duplicate exactly, but the simplicity of the original concept of 2 reciprocating springs (1966—no fancy hydraulics or electrics here) was easy to copy. Actually used 2 HD off road Bike springs. Now 10C will follow 10B, as it did in 1967. First weekend in July is going to be final frame / chassis painting and running the basic electrical wiring. Then on to Polishing all the wonderful stainless and aluminum.

Update, August 1: Because I’ve made a commitment to have these 2 PeopleMovers on display at a Disneyland Hotel event in mid September, working every weekend seems not to be enough. So, I’ve got a guy to polish. All that aluminum and stainless: polish – polish – polish. Time consuming – back breaking and messy. BUT once it shines, it’s GREAT! All the metal has been cut and base polished, now on to buffing and hand polish. The aluminum was in bad shape. Pitted from 40+ years out in the elements, but it sure looks great now.

Both 10B and 10C chassis and frames are assembled, even the wood “push plates” underneath are in (except for the curved ends; having trouble with them since they have rubber corners!).

When we placed them side by side to start the wiring, I almost made a big mistake. I placed 10B “in front” of 10C but forgot that the PeopleMovers ran clockwise! So had to reverse them……

We “hooked up” the Tow Bar we had fabricated between the 2 cars and found we were less than ½" from the original blueprints!



The wiring on 10B is mostly done and tested – lights stereo and door/top motor and timers. 10C is next. In as many places as possible, we used the original wire. Still got battery/charger wiring to go.

The Painter has sanded and painted 10B exterior and fixed and reinforced all the exterior of 10C. 10C was in bad shape. Lots of cracks and brittle. Three coats of sanded primer. Of course, the fiberglass is over 40 years old. Glad it’s all there. Next is the interiors. Have to go from pictures to duplicate the original interior color (it was a tan color). After will come the tops.

Even with all this, we’ve found time to play with the PeopleMover console. Basic “box” is done. Might paint soon and then wire. Might be done in time for the display. But PeopleMovers first… Wish me luck!

Thanks for taking on this giganormous task, Kevin, and helping to preserve a valued piece of Disneyland history!

See more Disneyland PeopleMover photos at my main website.