good points, i guess the motion of the elevator is constrained heavily by acceleration forces and building heights…
however, i still think the time it takes for an elevator to open its doors and close them on every floor it stops at (a bulk of the total trip time in a tall building) is way too slow.
surely we could use cameras to detect when people were at risk of getting doors closed on them (rather than the in-door lasers), and when the coast is clear the doors could quickly shut. i still find myself smashing the door close button every time i get in an elevator.
You know how Star Trek always has those fast opening and closing doors?
I uses to know a guy who worked on props, and actually helped design and build those doors. He said they were terrifying, as there was simply no way to build them sufficiently light weight to not have the potential to seriously injure someone if they accidentally closed on you. It was bad enough that they had to carefully choreograph ever scene where someone walked through the doors, along with multiple independent people actually operating them to make sure one person screwing up wouldn't be enough to result in an injury.
Again, physics screws you over. A robust door is heavy, and that much mass moving that fast is enough momentum to seriously hurt you if the sensors ever fail.
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10 sats \ 1 reply \ @kr OP 2 Mar
i can’t say i’ve ever seen star trek, but i hear you on the safety problems with fast-moving doors 😅
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Well, you need to watch Star Trek Next Generation. DS9 and Voyager would be good too.
STNG was my childhood!
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