The Phu Quoc Cable Car, also known as the Hon Thom Cable Car, holds the Guinness World Record for being the longest 3-wire sea cable car in the world.
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Located on the island of Phu Quoc, in the south of the country just at the border with Cambodia, the cable car spans 7,899.9 meters, connecting the town of An Thoi to the island of H?
In 2017, 10 people were killed when a cable car fell into a ravine hundreds of meters (feet) deep in the popular mountain resort of Murree after its cable broke.
Silver Mountain Resort is home to North America's longest gondola - a 3.1 mile journey from Kellogg to the Mountain House where all will enjoy fresh mountain air, stunning panoramic views, and delicious food!
Skyway Monte Bianco is a cable car in the Italian Alps, linking the town of Courmayeur with Pointe Helbronner on the southern side of the Mont Blanc massif. Taking over three years to construct, it opened in 2015 at a cost of 110 million euros, and is considered to be the world's most expensive cable car installation.
After an average of 30 years, cable cars reach the end of their life, although some components such as cables have to be discarded considerably earlier. In some cases, legal requirements demand the removal of installations after just twenty years, so it is a good thing that cable cars have multiple lives.
The Eiger Express may be the fastest cable car in the world ! It current operates at speeds up to 29 km/h and whisks passengers from the valley in Grindelwald, Switzerland up to the Eigergletscher station.
Tourist attractionsThe world's longest metro cable car system, at over 16km, is in La Paz, Bolivia. The Mi Teleférico functions as La Paz's principal public transport system and currently has 25 stations and six separate lines running across the city.
Gondolas, also known as cable cars, consist of different cabins connected to a thick cable that is constantly circulating between its low and high point. Tramways have two large passenger cabins that shuttle up and down on a fixed moving cable.
Most aerial cable systems can make turns, although it is difficult, or near impossible, for fixed grip technologies such as aerial trams and pulsed gondolas. (Fixed grip systems, particularly pulsed gondolas systems do sometimes make slight turns along specially designed towers.)