Needle of the Midday
FCMD North America Keeps Ski Resort Running Efficiently
Half a million global visitors visit Aiguille du Midi as an access point for skiing in the winter and hiking, rock climbing and paragliding in the spring, summer, and autumn seasons. The mountain—part of the French Alps—boasts the current title of employing “the world’s highest vertical ascent cable car.” This unique transportation takes passengers from 3,396 to 12,605 ft. above the clouds. The planetary gearboxes needed for the cable car operation are provided by CMD Gears.
The Aiguille du Midi cable car connects the center of Chamonix, France up to the summit. It is a two-stage journey starting at 1,035 m altitude up to 2,317 m at the Plan de l’Aiguille. A second stage, without any support pillars, traverses Les Pelerins glacier before rising the North Face of the Aiguille du Midi at the top station at 3,778 m.
“The ski lift was originally built in the 1950s,” said Clement Ravache, sales engineer, CMD Gears, France. “Then, in the early 1990s as a modernization project, the Mont Blanc Company, responsible for the lift, started working with engineering companies from within the region and thanks to our expertise and long history with reducers, CMD Gears was issued the contract to supply three planetary gearboxes.”


Installation at 12,605 ft.
Fast-forward 30+ years and that same company reached out to CMD to supply one more planetary gearbox. The plan was simple: Operate three reducers and have an additional reducer on-hand as a spare part, Ravache added.
Gearbox installation for any application has its own unique set of challenges, but how about handling equipment of this size and scope on a mountain?
“Some of the challenges involved with the job were first, the altitude at which the job had to be performed and the gearbox installed,” said Ravache. “Indeed, the design of the lift was made so all three gearboxes would operate from the middle section—thus at 2,317 m altitude. For security reasons, the lift was designed so that one gearbox would drive the first stage and one for the second with a back-up right beside it.”