Hello everyone... no, I did not fall off the face of Earth! I haven't made a post here in years! But I came across something interesting today while browsing Cedar Point's Halloweekends page at https://www.cedarpoint.com/haunt that I wanted to share.
At the bottom of the page is a banner for this year's Halloweekends. On the right is Millennium Force's lift hill and 1st overbanked turn, but something quite interesting is on the left...
It's clearly a B&M dive machine coaster outline. It's pretty obvious from the lift, vertical drop, typical immelmen, and even a breakrun with another vertical drop similar to Griffon/Sheikra. The coaster looks almost like a mirror image of "Diving Coaster" at Happy Valley as seen here http://rcdb.com/4224.htm?p=0. You can even see the zigzagging steps to the breakrun and the support columns matchup perfectly with other dive coasters.
Cedar Fair doesn't own a single park with a B&M dive machine... so why is there one in this promo image? It would be a great addition to the Cedar Point lineup... and a good follow up to Gatekeeper. CP seems to get into "multiple-coaster-contracts" with companies; Corkscrew, Gemini, Iron Dragon, and Magnum all came from Arrow from 1976-1989... Raptor and Mantis came consecutively from B&M in 1994-1996... and of course Millennium, WT, TTD, and Maverick all are from Intamin from 2000-2007. With the last coaster being from B&M, I would expect there to be at least 1 or 2 more in the agreement.
Is CP sending a subtle clue? Or did CP's graphic designer just randomly pick a roller coaster for their banner? Will a B&M diver be flying over Frontier Town in 2015? I hope so...
-Twister
Dorney IS getting a Dive machine. They just have to wait until it is being relocated out of Cedar Point. :-)
884 Coasters, 34 States, 7 Countries
http://www.rollercoasterfreak.com My YouTube
Oh, that's ok, T-W-I-S-T-E-R.
You know since you've been gone there's been a hard and fast rule established here at CoasterBuzz, and that is that we are all required to check and re-check our facts before pos... post... post...ing... HAHAHAHAHAHAHA I'm usually pretty good, but sorry, I just couldn't hold a straight face through that one...
Vater said:
Jiminy Christmas. It's a banner with generic coaster silhouettes. Why does everything have to be code for something new?
Because of all those silly, meaningless, poorly thought out 'games' that lazy PR people toss together leading up to announcements.
We've been trained...poorly.
Capitalize said:
Using an image of a roller coaster from another chain of parks that looks nothing like a ride at any of their parks on their web site is a little bit humorous to me.
Why? The point of the banner wasn't to promote a Cedar Fair park or coaster, the point was to promote Halloween events across the chain. The graphic chosen had the coaster elements while leaving space for the various park event logos front and center.
Life is something that happens when you can't get to sleep.
--Fran Lebowitz
slithernoggin said:
Why? The point of the banner wasn't to promote a Cedar Fair park or coaster, the point was to promote Halloween events across the chain. The graphic chosen had the coaster elements while leaving space for the various park event logos front and center.
Why does it matter so much to you? Why does my reaction of "Hah, that ride isn't at Cedar Point or any Cedar Fair park; that's silly" require this much attention?
Its a web site promoting Cedar Fair parks. The ride isn't at a Cedar Fair park. They have hundreds of potential rides to choose from that actually exist at one of their parks; and they go with a ride at a Busch Gardens park. It's just that simple. To me its akin to when the park chains use the same stock video roll to advertise all of their parks/rides, but a step worse because the ride is not at any Cedar Fair park. Stuff like that amuses me in some small manner. Probably similar to inside jokes that Trekkies have? Whatever, too bad you don't agree that it's a little bit funny.
You must be logged in to post