cthia wrote:Weird Harold wrote:With grav plates and contragrav technology, the felt g-force is probably about 1/10th the actual G forces. Express elevators probably run at 20-30 Gs with no more felt acceleration than real-world express elevators.
If that's true, sounds like there may even be a need for inertial compensators on elevators as well. And OSHA better not slack on inspection, or some elevator rides are going to be fatal.
More people die in car accidents than elevator rides?
Elevators, still the safest way to fly.
Johnathan_S wrote:Nope, grav plates alone can 'sink' at least 50 g (not counting the MAlign super-grav plates) No compensator needed. (plus without a wedge or sail there's no place for a compensator to 'sink' the accel; so it can't function)
Still even in a 200 story tall building I doubt they'd run the elevators at more than maybe 1.75g accel - that's enough to run to the top floor in about 12 seconds (and your top speed hits 230 mph). And if the grav plate lost power the ~2.75g you felt (because of the ~1g normal gravity added to the 1.75g of additional accel) would be survivable.
Grav plates have enough extra capability that you could do silly things with them like unlinking the actual elevator motion from the motion you felt in the car. Feels like you're descending slowely while you're rocketing up. Or you're floating in 0g while moving. Of just feel as if you aren't moving at all. But I suspect the user experience is better when you do let the felt motion mirror the actual motion; just at reduced intensity. (Though for amusement park rides...)
Not necessarily for small kids or weakly and or handicapped adults. Or even the inebriated or under the influence. Die because you're high. Whatta double entendre.
But what about the descent? Even at 1.75 g the elevator outruns free fall and the top of your head will inevitably smash against the top of the elevator. I suppose a simple football helmet will do. lol
Because of the grav plates you may not feel you're about to die but you'll feel the splitting headache if you survive it.
Certainly, I think, a bit of handwaving is involved here - at least in a rubbing fashion of the knot atop your head.
Also, your experience with High-rises is most unusual. 12 seconds to traverse a 200 story building in the city, when someone on every floor wants on, and 50 % of those getting on want to get off, and after just one to five floors travel. Etc., etc., etc.
As I said, it seems relationships can begin and end on Honorverse elevators.