Awesome demonstration! I talked to a security guard at Willow bend one day about two of the elevators being broken and she explained that she even knew how to do the dead man’s control which I was surprised. I told her I know that trick as well.
@@ARelevators I figured it out, it's used for moving the elevator to a certain spot for inspection or something like that, it has been discontinued on Schindler Elevators Today.
No wonder Schindler got rid of their "Hand" mode, and one reason why the older American Schindler elevators had confused controllers, was because their hydraulic controllers were called "MPH," and their traction controllers "MPT."
Don't try the stop switch in the Mariott Marquis in New York Bad Idea you might GO ALL THE WAY down at leveling speed you been in stuck in there for a while
Elevators installed in hospitals have a special mode to allow medical responders to get to emergencies faster. A user puts there key in, the nearest elevator is taken out of service and responds. The elevator also moves at maximum operating speed as opposed to normal speeds which is much slower.
Schindler's fire service is a bit different: The chime is disabled like Dover and ThyssenKrupp, however, instead of a buzzer/beeper going off, the floor passing chime repeatedly sounds until the door slowly opens. It's kinda like nudging the elevator.
Awesome demonstration! I talked to a security guard at Willow bend one day about two of the elevators being broken and she explained that she even knew how to do the dead man’s control which I was surprised. I told her I know that trick as well.
Patton Hall, as stated in the description
Rare indicator placement on this elevator, according to tkefan29 since I found an indicator placement similar to this one.
Nice motor sound by the way
Love the dead man's control!
Anjasomc
P
P
If you disrupt the door or push door open while it's closing in HE, it will reopen, but it will cancel out the call(s) too.
Could you imagine if you were doing this 30 floors up and the elevator had to go down to the lobby at levelling speed?
Do you like Elmo?
nice demonstration. that fan sounds like an engine.
Sam Sitar ikr
It's an MT. RT buttons are round.
THIS ELEVATOR HAS TWO PAIRS OF DOORS!
Spammer.
@@homeguestunton SHUT UP!
@@sionspeaks No you’re actually the one.
Also that’s a signal slide door not a center-opening door.
lol this video still gets comment’s
It is called Hand Service.
For future reference: the notch on the key lines up with the arrow on the lock.
Maybe you know, what's the purpose of hand service.
@@Jamestube8439 idk either i wanna know
@@ARelevators I figured it out, it's used for moving the elevator to a certain spot for inspection or something like that, it has been discontinued on Schindler Elevators Today.
Cool awesome demo.
The BEST Motor Ever!
Yeah, it would make a weird sound where it would get loud then quiet and over and over again
dieselducy hand is for elevator tech to access the hoistway
No wonder Schindler got rid of their "Hand" mode, and one reason why the older American Schindler elevators had confused controllers, was because their hydraulic controllers were called "MPH," and their traction controllers "MPT."
CaptainElevator42189 hand mode is now called hoistway access today
sean juth
That’s not entirely true.
Don't try the stop switch in the Mariott Marquis in New York Bad Idea you might GO ALL THE WAY down at leveling speed you been in stuck in there for a while
Did you try it?
the elevator was in hand service
What's hospital service? By the way that was one interesting motor.
Jamestube 8439 ???
Elevators installed in hospitals have a special mode to allow medical responders to get to emergencies faster. A user puts there key in, the nearest elevator is taken out of service and responds. The elevator also moves at maximum operating speed as opposed to normal speeds which is much slower.
Schindler's fire service is a bit different: The chime is disabled like Dover and ThyssenKrupp, however, instead of a buzzer/beeper going off, the floor passing chime repeatedly sounds until the door slowly opens. It's kinda like nudging the elevator.
Nice
And it is not exactly independent service: You don't have to hold the button down to close the door. This might be called code blue service.
Code Blue Service requires constant pressure on the D/C button too.
i seen this video before
Maybe you shouldn’t be screwing with something you have absolutely no clue as to how it works.
MT
Luke