The park is pretty nice if you've never been there. It has the "charm." And yes, there are plenty of hotels nearby, and Fort Worth.
Dear Kings Island, please do this to SOB. Thanks. :)
Dear Cedar Point, please do this to MS. Thanks. :)
Texas Giant looks really smooth, but I wonder if it will age well? Will those I-beams ever get pits or bumps in them? How easy will they be to replace once they do?
-Travis
www.youtube.com/TSVisits
I'd love for them to take SoB, make the drop like 70*, then a double up and then over bank down into the rose bowl, then they can shorten the brake run, have a double down, add the loop back, overbank back up into the 2nd helix, reprofile the hill over the track for more airtime, 90* turn around, another hop, then back to the station.
Don't cry because it's over, smile because it happened.
LostKause said:
...I wonder if it will age well?
Probably no better or worse than any other steel coaster.
Brandon | Facebook
OhioStater said:
Fast? No doubt it looks like a blast, but it looked pretty slow to me. ? I'm not drinking, I swear...especially at the end of the clip...that's full speed?
I think most folks are impressed at how fast it was without a full-length train.
Not sure what exactly happens with short-train coasters (thinking about AvancHellcat or whatever its called these days at the minigolf in the Dells, and about PNE Vancouver's Coaster)....they look and feel like they are FLYING through the course.
I understand in a general way how the physics works, and that longer trains should theoretically maintain momentum around the course better - so I think it's more of an illusory effect, but I'd love to have more rides run with "stubby" trains...I think I recall some of our discussions about that from 8-10 years ago, and the term we applied then was "cartoonishly fast". :)
You still have Zoidberg.... You ALL have Zoidberg! (V) (;,,;) (V)
That may be perception though. If you have a shorter train, you probably perceive that it's going fast than a longer train because it takes a train going the same speed less time to pass a point on the track.
In addition to the whole momentum thing, longer trains tend to ride more intensely at the ends because the front and back seats are farther from the center of mass and so the crest the extreme points on a hill at a faster velocity.
Hobbes: "What's the point of attaching a number to everything you do?"
Calvin: "If your numbers go up, it means you're having more fun."
Andy's got it. In Dynamics, you treat the train as a "point mass" where the center of the mass (the point) is the average of the two ends and everything in between. The shorter the train, the more the ends act like the center of the train and vice-versa. A short three-car train can't have much variance in acceleration from end to end without tightening the curvature of the hills to make the train length "longer" relative to the curvature of the hills.
For example, if Millennium Force had a short train, the curvature of the first drop could be much tighter and still exert the same g-forces on the riders as it does now. If the train was any longer, the hill would have to be more drawn out than it is now to maintain the same g-forces.
AV Matt
Long live the Big Bad Wolf
That would be cool, but I'll wait until the announcement before I get excited.
-Travis
www.youtube.com/TSVisits
"both"? What about the other one?
Oh, that's right, that one doesn't tear itself apart. That doesn't mean it isn't a POS. I mean, you don't get voted World's Worst Wooden Roller Coaster for fourteen straight years without being a POS.
--Dave Althoff, Jr.
/X\ _ *** Respect rides. They do not respect you. ***
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/XXXXX\ /XXX\ /XXXX\_ /X\ /XXXXX\ /X\ /X\ /XXXXX
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It would be the coolest thing in the universe if SOB got this, and the loop was replaced! ...In the universe!
:)
-Travis
www.youtube.com/TSVisits
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