TomBarsh
Structural
- Jun 20, 2002
- 1,003
John Hancock Center is one of the tallest buildings in Chicago (okay, I guess its name was officially changed earlier this year).
One of the express elevators to the restaurants and observation level at the top of the building experienced broken cable(s) this week. A number of news articles have referred to it "plummeting 85 stories". I find this to be incredible and think "surely the news accounts are somewhat exaggerated" about plummeting 85 floors. But this description seems to be in numerous news sources, even those I trust (eg: not the National Enquirer).
Can this really be so? ASME has a strict code for elevator safety and inspections. And there are numerous safety devices on these systems. How could a car drop 85 floors? Perhaps it was decelerating for most of that drop? It came to a stop at the 11th floor, what if the cables had broken while the car was 12 stories lower than where they actually failed? it would have dropped to the basement.
Any insight or comments on this event?
ETA: I suppose it might be assumed by people (not engineers) that the car started free fall immediately at its top level...it came to a stop at floor 11, therefore "it fell 85 floors". But the catastrophic break of the cable(s) might have occurred at any point, maybe even floor 12.
One of the express elevators to the restaurants and observation level at the top of the building experienced broken cable(s) this week. A number of news articles have referred to it "plummeting 85 stories". I find this to be incredible and think "surely the news accounts are somewhat exaggerated" about plummeting 85 floors. But this description seems to be in numerous news sources, even those I trust (eg: not the National Enquirer).
Can this really be so? ASME has a strict code for elevator safety and inspections. And there are numerous safety devices on these systems. How could a car drop 85 floors? Perhaps it was decelerating for most of that drop? It came to a stop at the 11th floor, what if the cables had broken while the car was 12 stories lower than where they actually failed? it would have dropped to the basement.
Any insight or comments on this event?
ETA: I suppose it might be assumed by people (not engineers) that the car started free fall immediately at its top level...it came to a stop at floor 11, therefore "it fell 85 floors". But the catastrophic break of the cable(s) might have occurred at any point, maybe even floor 12.