I live in canada and the fire alarm is terrifying. Even if its a test im so scared and freaked out. You dont wanna hear a fire alarm IN canada. Not from a video. Anyways id love to watch the show.
Theatres use smoke detectors and heat detectors. Smoke detectors are sensitive to most atmospheric effects like haze, fog, fake smoke and mist. They are usually isolated. The sprinkler system onstage is referred to as a drencher. It is usually localised to the stage but it's not unheard of for it to cover the entire room. It's a large pipe with high pressure water inside designed to soak everything onstage to prevent fire spreading. On top of this, most theatres will be equipped with a safety 'curtain'. The curtain is either a very heavy and very fire resistant fabric or a huge metal wall on counterweights which drops in. This is usually either timed release to allow the cast to clear stage before it drops or manually operated by the stage management team onstage or other venue technicians elsewhere in the venue.
Some say that one elf is still standing on the stage, getting soaked by the sprinklers, to this day
Geez. And luckily for us, we were exploring the park at the time.
beuaahrr! Drenchers should be avoided in any theater. It should be a fire curtain on counter weight for slow drop.
Oh no! The toy shop is on fire!
Oh no! But the show looks fantastic!
Wow the sprinkler system
Oh wow, that's a big whoops...
8:23 💀💀
I live in canada and the fire alarm is terrifying. Even if its a test im so scared and freaked out. You dont wanna hear a fire alarm IN canada. Not from a video. Anyways id love to watch the show.
Ditto that! It gives me a headache
How did this happen? What set off the sprinklers and the alarms?
SuperMarioJustin4 we have no idea what or who set off the sprinklers or the alarms.
It was probably smoke.
Theatres use smoke detectors and heat detectors. Smoke detectors are sensitive to most atmospheric effects like haze, fog, fake smoke and mist. They are usually isolated.
The sprinkler system onstage is referred to as a drencher. It is usually localised to the stage but it's not unheard of for it to cover the entire room. It's a large pipe with high pressure water inside designed to soak everything onstage to prevent fire spreading.
On top of this, most theatres will be equipped with a safety 'curtain'. The curtain is either a very heavy and very fire resistant fabric or a huge metal wall on counterweights which drops in. This is usually either timed release to allow the cast to clear stage before it drops or manually operated by the stage management team onstage or other venue technicians elsewhere in the venue.
@@aaronwilson9465 TL;DR
@@Ghostieverse but there was no smoke in the 8 minutes?
In the Uk That’s just Constant ITS HORRID
i'd just start thinking is it part of the acting
Was that bell the fire alarm?
Yep. And he was obviously NOT in the Christmas spirit that night.
I was at Universal Studios when this happened
Oh no!