I think the thing a lot of people are waiting for is the actual seats and lap bars. The other features are certainly important to the owner of the ride, but I want to see that comfort! :)
Jeff - Editor - CoasterBuzz.com - My Blog
The trains look like they have a lot of potential. I'm excited to see them running somewhere.
- Julie
@julie
It is not practical to use a conventional style of lap bar on a Timberliner. I won't get into why just yet, but it isn't.
The Gravity Guys have come up with something interesting, though. If you look closely at the design of the seat frame shown in the photos, you can get some clues as to what they're doing. Best hint is that any restraint used needs to attach to the seat frame, not to the car chassis.
--Dave Althoff, Jr.
I think that the relationship between Gravity Group and Holiday is absolutely unbelievable. "Hey can we come out to your park and send our trains around on your ride?" Sure, no problem.
Plus I understand they built all those rides and such and yet I find it so weird that just come in and be the operator and know exactly what to do. Very strange but very cool.
I think The Gravity Group has a good enough relationship with all the parks that have their coasters that they could have tested their trains at any one of them. Holiday World makes the most sense because of its proximity to where TGG is located and the fact that the weather is likely to be better here than in Erie or Wisconsin Dells. Raven was a good choice because it is a shorter coaster with not many places where a rollback might occur.
To me, it goes like this. HW provided the means. Raven provided the opportunity. But The Voyage is the coaster that gave rise to the motivation for these trains - and I wouldn't be shocked to learn that it might be the first coaster to utilize Timberliners...as early as 2010.
You still have Zoidberg.... You ALL have Zoidberg! (V) (;,,;) (V)
^Agreed that they had to be in the works probably from the day TGG came into being - their hyper-aggressive layouts demand more "navigationability" than other coaster trains could provide. But until They Voyage, I'm not so sure parks were as convinced of the need. And a product that doesn't have customers seeing the need is a product without a market. MFlyers are excellent trains, very well designed to run on (frankly) much less aggressive layouts.
You still have Zoidberg.... You ALL have Zoidberg! (V) (;,,;) (V)
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