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Six Flags Over Texas in Arlington has confirmed an adult woman died while riding the Texas Giant Friday night. While news of the death quickly spread across Twitter, few details were confirmed as of 8 p.m.
Read more from The Dallas Morning News and WFAA/Dallas.
I am envisioning a lap bar that has many moving part and is adjustable for a lot of different body types. I wonder why these designers don't do anything like that.
It's 2013, and people are still being tossed from roller coasters.
-Travis
www.youtube.com/TSVisits
LostKause said:
I am envisioning a lap bar that has many moving part and is adjustable for a lot of different body types. I wonder why these designers don't do anything like that.
Because you're shifting the responsibility to the attendant to make a safety call. That's disaster waiting to happen on so many levels.
I wish I could show you all my design idea in my head. It wouldn't need any more looking at by an attendant then they do now. I see more moving parts as possibly causing a problem though, because there could be more room for mechanical failure. I'm not an engineer, but I have an interesting idea.
Phantoms revenge, for example has more movement in the lap bar than other rides. It swings over the rider's lap, but it also lift or lowers according to the size of the rider. My idea is something like that, except more like Diamondback's restraints.
-Travis
www.youtube.com/TSVisits
If there's more moving parts, there's more variation in how it could be applied and more chances it's being applied incorrectly.
That's my problem.
It's not so much moving parts as it is degrees of freedom. All restraints that I can think of have only one degree of freedom: they can pivot about a hinge. This gives them a limited range a motion that is predictable and easy to handle. For each degree of freedom you add, you're not only expanding the range of motion and the possible locations that the restraint could end up, but you're also adding that many more locking mechanisms.
LostKause said:
...Phantoms revenge, for example has more movement in the lap bar than other rides. It swings over the rider's lap, but it also lift or lowers according to the size of the rider. My idea is something like that, except more like Diamondback's restraints.
I really like the design of S&S restraints featured on Powder Keg and the Screaming Swings. It has deep, reclined seats and the lap bar comes down directly onto the riders' thighs.
I get very scared on the Screaming Swing because of the ridiculous airtime I get and the lapbar being as tight as it can go and still not being tight enough (never thought I'd have that issue on a ride). How people have not been ejected from that ride is beyond me.
But you and another poster brought up an interesting point: a multi-directional lapbar. I think that would be helpful, but I don't know HOW much safer it would be, if at all. They should try something like that on a ride sometime.
"Look at us spinning out in the madness of a roller coaster" - Dave Matthews Band
bunky666 said:
How people have not been ejected from that ride is beyond me.
Read through this thread and it won't be.
It's not about how tight the lapbar is, it's about the position the lapbar is in.
Hence, being stapled on your gut can result in an ejection while having room on your lap has been 100% incident free.
It looks like Iron Rattler is open again...
http://www.dallasnews.com/news/metro/20130816-six-flags-reopens-fie...tality.ece
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