We have two screening rooms with about 100 seats in each. Unfortunately, the architect specified sloped floors (nice) but then whoever speced and purchased the seats come to find, they are designed for a flat floor instillation. So now, all the seats are pitched forward. To make matters worse, they are smooth, plastic seats, not upholstered fabric, so given those two elements, one butt tends to want to constantly slide forward. Patrons unconsciously keep using their leg muscles to try to counteract their butts from sliding off the seat. After a two hour movie, people come out with strained muscles and cramps in their legs. I've inspected these seats hoping there was some hidden design that allows the seat legs to be adjusted to match the slope of the floor, but if there is such a mechanism in this design, it certainly is well hidden...or most likely in this case. there simply is no such adjustment.
Which got me thinking, is there a "standard" for sloped floors? That seems pretty unlikely to me and even on the same auditorium floor the slope varies. One theatre I worked in actually had the slope gradually reverse toward the front of the theatre so that a few rows were actually tilted backward. So I am guessing there must be some mechanism in theatre chair design that allows seats to be adjusted to level them regardless of the grade of the slope, yes? Life would be a lot easier for this operator if these seats could indeed be adjusted. Without such an adjustment, it's just slip and slide or just admit defeat and replace all the seats in both screening rooms. Yes, same problem in each room!
Which got me thinking, is there a "standard" for sloped floors? That seems pretty unlikely to me and even on the same auditorium floor the slope varies. One theatre I worked in actually had the slope gradually reverse toward the front of the theatre so that a few rows were actually tilted backward. So I am guessing there must be some mechanism in theatre chair design that allows seats to be adjusted to level them regardless of the grade of the slope, yes? Life would be a lot easier for this operator if these seats could indeed be adjusted. Without such an adjustment, it's just slip and slide or just admit defeat and replace all the seats in both screening rooms. Yes, same problem in each room!
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