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The Jokes on You!! Ha H***
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Magnum Allan - FLCC member.
Hopefully One Day, you americans will get to experience one :)
Jokercoaster said:
I just think, no one has ordered on and they still make them, but if no one orders one they can't help that, they can do loops besides that one trick, and I'd like to see one in the US since G5 and Oblivion are basically identical except G5's drop is a bit taller. But I don't think its because of X and XLC because Oblivion's drop is 88.5 degrees-------------
The Jokes on You!! Ha H***
X's descent slope is 88.5°. Oblivion's is 87°.
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Lake Compounce-So Fresh and So Clean Clean
This is my opinion, but, if a park really has the land, money, and time to put in a dive machine, they will do so.
But I just think dive machines just have one thing going for them. They drop, turn, small dip, and hit the brakes. The drop is the only "major" part of the ride.
If you wanted a good, relatively cheaper(?) vertical type coaster, I would go with a Thrust Air. But then again, this is just my opinion.
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Although you can't see me, I'm skanking, skanking, skanking. I'm diggin' it. Back to you Fransisco.
*** This post was edited by WCS4488 on 5/17/2002. ***
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-Bob (formerly Coaster Jedi)
Knott's Berry Farm Cuba ~South Park
"Your proctologist called, he found your head!" ~Jerry "The King" Lawler
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Magnum Allan - FLCC member..
the capacity on oblivion is huge 1800 per hour i believe, so that is definately not an issue. Yes they may only have one trick, but what a trick it is. The pause over the drop is amazing and the drop itself just takes your breath away. I would like to see a bigger and longer layout, as i think the ride would be great.
Their Dive Coaster was designed to be a one trick pony, the whole ride is the vertical drop, which is why the trains were designed as they are - so everyone gets a decent view etc. About all you can add to that design is a vertical loop at most, a bunny hill or something. The trains are far too bulky to be cruising through twists and turns - lets not forget that their momentum is lost quickly due to the weight and relative length of the trains - a lot like wild mouse rides.
I'd wager that before too long, we'll be seeing the vertical drop incorporated into more standard rides - I'd expect smaller trains because that "yankage" would probably cross the comfort level of most people, unless we're talking gradual sloping, which really defeats the purpose of vertical drops. This paragraph was mostly woffle, so feel free to ignore it, its getting late and my caffeine is wearing off.
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So what if the best coaster in Australia is a second hand Arrow?
Hey guys check out this
http://ft.coasterwire.com/ubb_cgi/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic&f=1&t=000010
Not entirely relevent but it shows the Dive Machine B&M sent to the patent Office. Pitty they never built it really.
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