Flying Trapeze Rig Maintenance, Inspections & Warranty
MACA maintenance safety checks cost USD $500 per day and are recommended yearly, with frequency depending on usage and environmental conditions. A routine inspection takes 2 days plus travel time. Inspections are required for warranty validity. See full pricing.
What does a rig inspection cover?
A full safety inspection of the complete rig, with repair or replacement of any worn elements: cables, lines, net, belts, hardware and structural connections. The inspecting team is the same team that builds and operates these rigs — not a third-party generalist working from a checklist they didn’t write.
On completion, MACA issues a Certificate of Inspection for public display. For a resort or attraction this matters twice over: guests see independent confirmation that the equipment is professionally maintained, and your insurers and auditors see a dated inspection record from the manufacturer. More on resort operations →
How does the warranty work?
Annual inspections are required for the validity of your warranty — an uninspected rig is an uncovered rig. [PLACEHOLDER: warranty length and full terms — must be confirmed by MACA before publication]
The 5-year maintenance contract
MACA offers a 5-year maintenance contract at the standard inspection daily rate of USD $500/day. The contract locks in the inspection program that keeps the warranty valid and the certificate current, with routine inspections of 2 days plus travel time. For an operator, it converts an irregular maintenance question into a fixed, scheduled line item.
Service prices exclude: return flights and visas. The client provides accommodation, transfers and meals for the MACA team.
Consumables and replacement cycles
Day-to-day maintenance is a stock-management problem: chalk, tape, belts, lines and backup cables get consumed, and the rig should never wait on a resupply. The Full Stock Package (USD $9,910) ships with mount board and minimum stock levels so your Activity Manager can see at a glance what needs reordering. Typical replacement intervals for nets, cables and belts: [PLACEHOLDER: typical replacement intervals by component].
Safety culture between inspections
Annual inspections verify the rig; daily checks by trained staff protect it. Operator training (details here) establishes daily rig-check SOPs, correct use of safety lines and fall arresters, and the mat placement disciplines that the Safety Mat Package supports. Maintenance is not an event once a year — it is a habit the inspection confirms. Ask us about an inspection schedule for your rig.