I'm not sure hitting hard plexiglass would have a desirable outcome, either.
Sure, but it's not going to decapitate someone. Have you ever been on a tube slide where you catch some air? The "straight drop" one at Waldameer launches you forward so far forward when you break over that I've hit my face on the top part.
I'm sure you'd get hurt if you flew into that, but I don't think he was "launched" into it so much as one of the metal poles caught his neck and he kept going forward.
You're going to end up in the hospital regardless of the surface if you hit it face first going 65 mph. Just more reason that this ride should've never been built.
Ok...let me clarify. The 46 year old "me" said "holy crap". The 20 year old me would have been all over that airtime slide.
Note to self: Don't post long format from iOS.
With that out of the way...
There has been a lot of discussion about the restraints on Verrückt and the impact of their failure. Personally, I don't think it makes a bit of difference.
Remember, we are talking about a water slide here. The rafts on Verrückt are NOT fixed to the channel, and for this reason it is theoretically impossible for a rider to get any airtime on the ride, at least as we understand it as coaster nuts. A rider in an inertial reference frame will not experience -Gz (upward) forces on the ride. There is no mechanism in place which will create a -Gz force. When the raft reaches the top of the second hill, it will attempt to follow a ballistic path, and if the slide flume is at or above that ballistic path, the raft will follow the flume. If the flume dips below the raft's ballistic path, the raft will go airborne.
But the riders will not. The riders are also following a ballistic path, with their initial velocity determined by the boat. This means that the ballistic path followed but the riders should be substantially identical to the ballistic path that the boat would follow if the slide were not there. This suggests that the reasoning behind putting the belts in the raft probably had little or nothing to do with the possibility of a rider being ejected from the raft during the ride. Okay, because of variations in the locations of the centers of mass, and the rebound effect of muscles and inflated raft parts it might be possible for the rider to lift very slightly. But he's not going to be lifted out of his seat in any substantial way, and any insubstantial lift isn't going to be dramatically effected by the presence or absence of a safety belt.
I suggest that the belt is more of a positioning aid than a restraint. While the ride won't produce a significant -Gz force, it may generate a substantial -Gx (forward) force when the raft gets to the bottom of the first drop and starts up the second hill. That is, the raft will slow substantially while the rider tends to keep going. The lap belt may serve to keep the rider's butt from sliding forward off the seat. Meanwhile, the shoulder strap serves not so much to restrain the rider against ride forces, but to discourage the rider from leaning forward during the drop, in a posture that could cause him to smash his face and head into the rider ahead. The critical moment for this would be in the dip between the two hills, so if the strap happens to break away at that point, it really makes very little difference to the safety of the ride: it lasted just long enough to keep the rider upright during that portion of the ride where remaining upright was critical. That the restraints on the ride are not very effective is not really an issue because the restraints on the ride are not all that important.
At this point, I'd like to emphasize an important point: I have never ridden Verrückt, I haven't studied it in great detail, and I have never even been to KCKS, let alone to Schlitterbahn. So everything I suggest here is just as much conjecture and speculation as everything else you've read on the subject.
But I don't think the restraint is of any significant importance to the incident. My suspicion is that for whatever reason, the raft probably became airborne, and in that process the young victim was not lifted from the raft, but rather lifted *with* the raft into a position where he became entangled with the netting structure and was subsequently yanked out of the raft by that entanglement.
We shall see what the investigation reveals.
--Dave Althoff, Jr.
/X\ _ *** Respect rides. They do not respect you. ***
/XXX\ /X\ /X\_ _ /X\__ _ _ _____
/XXXXX\ /XXX\ /XXXX\_ /X\ /XXXXX\ /X\ /X\ /XXXXX
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Safe to say they remove this Slide and we never see anything built like it again!
I also am of the camp that the raft went airborne thus allowing the boys neck to catch the metal netting support. I think Dave's logic seems correct and am wondering if a gust of wind somehow forced the boat up more than had previously occurred, combined with a unique weighting in the boat. What I am very curious to see is if the park was either aware of any "near miss" incidents, or if they did any sort of scientific testing on how close to the slide to place the netting (somewhat similar to the clearance envelope that coaster designers use). The only way that I foresee this ride continuing to operate is with a removal of the second hill.
Regardless, a 10 year old lost his life on a day that was meant to be fun. I shudder thinking about how horribly things went wrong for him. My thoughts and prayers for all those impacted by this tragedy.
For you guys thinking the boat went up into the netting. It would destroy the seats as the headrests on Verrückt are high. Here's a website link showing the picture showing the headrests. The 10 year old kid would be well below the top of the headrests. The seats are made of hard rubber foam attached to a floorboard holding all 3 seats which is chained to the boat via carabiner clip. So I don't how a boat would go airborne into the nets and eject the kid.
I have ridden Verrückt at least 40 times. I have had all sorts of experiences with the ride from airborne boats to a crawl over the top and the occasional velcro strap issue. (I always tug it before I leave to make sure it doesn't fly off and just in case I hold on to the straps as instructed.)
Chris Knight
Maybe it did destroy the kid's seat as well? We have no idea what happened to the boat. Regardless, if the kid was sitting in the front and the boat went airborne, his head is still going to hit the railing before the back of his seat does.
Agreed that there wouldn't appear to be any mechanism that could launch a rider from the raft under normal operation; the rider would at minimum only approach zero-g (but not attain it) at the top of the second hill on a typical run. And I also agree that wet rides also tend to count on both a rider's choice and ability to follow the rules in order to avoid injury, more so than on dry rides.
That said, I haven't found a good explanation as to what is used to slow the raft at the bottom of the first drop. It appears to count on water blasters to make sure the raft crests the second hill, so the speed from the first drop is scrubbed off prior to the blasters by some mechanism. Is there a possibility that this changed/failed and allowed the raft to retain it's speed into the second hill? This would be the only way the raft would leave the flume.
Also, not having ridden Verruckt, I'm not familiar with the pacing of the ride, but is it possible that one could take the first big plunge and then after bottoming out try to stand up and 'surf' crest of the second hill? I know most people would ask, 'Why?' But this was a 10 year old, and I've seen adults try it riding PTCs with one-click on their lap bar. Unfortunate things have happened as a result of that as well. If that is the case, maybe the failure of the restraint was that it was removable by the rider during the ride. With two riders in the raft behind the boy, they might be able to answer if this was what occurred.
Any way you cut it, this is a tragedy for all involved. Prayers for all of the families all around.
There is a water slide at DelGrosso's that has a small airtime hill called Gravity Groove. I've never seen anyone get any real air on it though. This is the only video I could find of the ride.
-Travis
www.youtube.com/TSVisits
Mister Halo said:
...That said, I haven't found a good explanation as to what is used to slow the raft at the bottom of the first drop. It appears to count on water blasters to make sure the raft crests the second hill, so the speed from the first drop is scrubbed off prior to the blasters by some mechanism. Is there a possibility that this changed/failed and allowed the raft to retain it's speed into the second hill? This would be the only way the raft would leave the flume.(...)
Fluids do not perform the way you might expect them to.
Take a structure like Verrückt, and roll a bowling ball down the drop. That bowling ball will roll down the long drop, and at the bottom it will keep rolling and go on up the other side. It will then roll over the top if it has enough momentum; if it has too much momentum it will fly over the top of the second hill. This is the kind of behavior we expect from stuff going up and down ramps. Roller coasters, Hot Wheels cars, bowling balls, even sliding objects all behave in more or less this same way.
Now take a gallon of water and pour it down the slide. It won't run up the second hill. It will roll down the first drop and form a pool at the bottom. Someone who knows a whole lot more about fluids than I do can explain why this is, but with a few simple experiments you can see that this is the case. Even if the slide is designed to drain the water off at the bottom (and I'm fairly certain it is), I can see the boat getting considerable braking action from that pooling action at the bottom of the drop. Remember also that the boat is sliding down the chute, which means that the resistive force it experiences is going to be proportional to the weight of the boat.
Another issue to consider is the water jet system used to propel the boat to the top of the second hill. The amount of force needed to overcome gravity and get the boat to the top of the second hill is also proportional to the mass of the boat. Given that there is a relatively narrow window of allowable weights for the boat, if the boat is significantly underweight, the jets might actually push it too fast over the crest of the second hill, which in turn could cause it to go airborne over the top.
--Dave Althoff, Jr.
/X\ _ *** Respect rides. They do not respect you. ***
/XXX\ /X\ /X\_ _ /X\__ _ _ _____
/XXXXX\ /XXX\ /XXXX\_ /X\ /XXXXX\ /X\ /X\ /XXXXX
_/XXXXXXX\__/XXXXX\/XXXXXXXX\_/XXX\_/XXXXXXX\__/XXX\_/XXX\_/\_/XXXXXX
Fluid dynamics is indeed a complex and non-intuitive discipline of physics. Verruckt was designed to use its principles for both lubrication going down the hills as well as hydrodynamic braking of some sort (at the end if not at the bottom of the first hill as well). The bottom of the first hill would have to be constantly drained or the raft would be slowed significantly by entering the standing water that would accumulate at the bottom. Looking at the pictures and videos of Verruckt, I can't tell if the black patches going up the second hill are just drains, or some sort of raised braking material to both slow the raft as well as give it some stability to keeping if from squirming around in the flume, or a combination of both. The large black patch at the bottom of the first drop definitely looks like it is there for braking as water runs across it rather than draining through it, and on-ride videos show riders heads jerking as the raft reaches this patch. I can't imagine how that sort of braking system could fail, but there is just too much we don't know about the whole setup to do more than speculate at this point.
It is interesting to hear from experienced riders that there is a pretty good range of velocities that the rafts crest the second hill with. But something pretty extreme would have had to happen to propel the whole raft (or far less likely, one rider) into the netting.
By the way, water won't run up the second hill because it can lose energy internally (something a solid isn't very good at) through turbulence and viscosity, as well as to it's container (dependent on boundary conditions), but mainly in this case because it is free for every molecule to take it's own path of least resistance and spread out beyond the sides of the flume.
With the Velcro, the restraints can be removed by the rider which could be a good thing, see Shot the Rapids.
Dale from Dayton
This is true. And it also puts a good portion of responsibility back in the court of the rider's choice to follow the rules. Corporate lawyers for a park chain would have likely have pushed back hard before having something like this built. There likely would have at least been an age restriction (even higher than the one proposed) along with the height restriction.
I agree with Rideman's and Halo's discussion of the physics of the raft and riders. However, you can't discount the importance of the restraint. The most unpredictable aspect in all of this is rider response and behavior. Restraints are needed for rider positioning for weight distribution, but also serves to keep the riders in the raft through the changes in g forces, and to prevent riders from kneeling, standing, etc.
What we know right now is that 1. the boy was separate from the raft at the end of the ride, and 2. there were several reports of malfunctioning restraints on the ride. That would lead me to believe that the boy may have been separated from the raft(either accidentally or willfully) prior to the injury. On a ride like this, it seems to me that once you became separated from the raft, all the physics of the raft weight, rider positioning, etc. are null and you really have no idea what might result.
I have a question, and maybe Dave or someone else can answer this, but what is the logic of putting the lightest person in the front of the boat? Wouldn't the boat behave more predictably if the heavier people were placed in the front and back? I think the reports have said that he was in the front seat and I am just questioning why that is.
Two reasons that you would want the weight in the back are:
A) If the the raft's weight is nose heavy, and the raft does become airborne for some strange reason, there is a greater likelihood it will over-rotate going over a crest. Keeping the center of mass just back of center will keep the front end up instead of dropping down the hill first.
2) In a braking pool, you wouldn't want a lot of weight in the front, causing the nose to dig in. This is the same reason boats that 'come up on plane' keep the weight toward the back.
The could be more reasons as well.
^ah, thanks Mr. Halo. I forget about the fluid dynamics aspect of this and wasn't completely thinking about the pool of water at the bottom (and Dave's explanation of water not rolling up a hill like a bowling ball).
Probably unrelated, but the new Massiv water coaster at Schlitterbahn Galveston has high sides instead of the traditional netting that NBGS used to put on its slides (and on Verrukt). As I mentioned earlier in the thread, this ride was built by Whitewater as NBGS sold off its patents a while back. It's probably just a coincidence, but it makes you wonder if Whitewater had a reason for the new design. You'd think that all the additional slide pieces would be more expensive than steel hoops and netting.
But maybe not in the long run. Those nets are unsightly, need to be installed, probably require they're own maintenance, and maybe aren't the safety feature they're cracked up to be.
But no matter. I see places on both styles where one might crack their head...
I don't get how anyone would think putting up thin metal hoops over the riders heads as they go by at up to 65mph is a good idea. Those should be removed from all of Schlitterbahn's slides as those things can cut like a knife. Really stupid engineering.
I'd rather be in my boat with a drink on the rocks, than in the drink with a boat on the rocks.
Just make the sides of the slides tall enough to contain the boats under any possible circumstances within the operational envelope.
I wouldn't be surprised if all nets were removed from the water coasters that have them in the near future.
A much better design would be similar to what that (AWESOME) airtime slide in Utah has... high side walls. If the walls on the airtime hill were ridiculous, say 5 feet high, even if you caught a little air your boat would just come back down and continue on. The nets, in hindsight, are a death trap waiting to happen.
Hell I just rode Black Anaconda at Noah's Ark (same nets) and the guy in the back of our raft caught some air.
The riders of the raft appear to have been properly within the weight range of the ride:
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/police-weights-in-caleb-schwab-kansas-w...in-limits/
In a way that's a small silver lining to this horrible incident. For the past week the lifeguards working the ride must've been second guessing themselves, wondering if they somehow screwed up and contributed to the accident.
On the flip side, this is another damning revelation for the ride designers as it's looking more and more likely that someone was killed on their ride which was operating under the parameters for which it was designed.
this is perhaps the most intelligent discussion I have seen on this topic, so I have chosen to post here instead of anywhere else. it appears that some of you know a fair amount of this ride’s history but to flesh it out a bit more here is some background on the ride technology in particular.
disclaimer: i am not casting stones nor am i assigning blame. schlitterbahn and its affiliates are owned, operated and run by decent people. I can promise you that nobody feels worse about what has happened than they do. not just because they are being thrown into the fire, but because the last thing they ever want to do is harm anybody. my heart goes out to everybody who has been affected by this horrible event.
the master blaster concept was conceived by jeff henry around 1992 based on tom lochtefeld’s patented sheet flow technology used for the flow rider. the resulting nozzle technology that propelled people uphill was truly revolutionary. although henry and schooley were involved in the initial development phase (1992-1994), the master blaster was primarily developed without their assistance over a 12-year period by nbgs/water ride concepts (schlitterbahn's design group) along with various vendors and technical specialists. during this 12-year period the ride technology evolved tremendously and by 2006 roughly 70 rides were built around the world either directly by nbgs or through their nbgs uk affiliate. neither henry nor schooley directly participated in the primary evolution of blaster technology nor were they directly involved in the design of any of these 70 rides. this task was left to nbgs staff who consisted of engineers, designers, programmers and cad technicians. in 2006 after the dissolution of nbgs there was a massive brain-drain and dispersal of experienced blaster personnel followed by the sale of the highly sought after licensing rights which were acquired by white water west industries. the ride’s evolution beyond this point is outside my scope of understanding. either white water west or members of the now defunct nbgs uk affiliate may have been the company(s) that refused to participate in the verruckt project.
originally billed as a tower replacement or people-mover, the first designs were not water-coasters in nature. they consisted of very modest hill profiles and focused primarily on keeping the tower heights relatively short. without any initial drop velocity, these early designs required huge pumps in order to achieve the velocities required to propel boats uphill. these rides were incredibly slow, notoriously unreliable at clearing the hills, horribly inefficient and expensive to operate. rides remained this way with only modest advancements until 1996 when the master blaster at blastenhoff was built. the lessons learned from the nine previous rides led designers to the conclusion that the most exciting part of any slide was still the downhill drop. since it turned out that riders really didn’t mind climbing towers the idea of using the nozzles to merely maintain initial drop velocities was adopted and towers began to get taller. This meant that blasters could have multiple drops with higher velocities, more reliable hill performance, smaller pumps and less expensive operating costs all while extending rides to lengths never seen before (1200’+).
the master blaster at blastenhoff represented the first water-coaster style ride and was at the time a huge leap forward. future designs built incrementally upon the ride at blastenhoff with each subsequent layout only advancing slightly beyond the previous iteration. additional tooling was developed to support this new design philosophy as existing tooling geometry was insufficient. uphill profiles were designed such that riders would not be able to clear the hill without assistance from the nozzles thereby keeping hill crest velocities under control and within a more predictable range. the hill crest radius built into the tooling was matched as close as possible to the water/boat’s natural trajectory to ensure that boats would not take flight. this improved control of hill profile and velocities while using the appropriate cresting geometry kept rides predictable, reliable and safe. to the best of my knowledge up until the verruckt the tallest blaster was 78’ in height with the steepest drop being at a 42-degree angle and tallest drop in the 35’-40’ range. it is somewhat safe to say that the verruckt would have required an even newer set of tooling to handle the increased heights and velocities involved. most notably the convex parts at the top of the hill would have needed to be larger than what was used for these previous rides. merely adjusting the heights and angles would have likely been insufficient. whether or not new tooling was developed is not clear.
specific points to note:
1) the safety netting was always a core design feature and was not intended to keep riders in the ride specifically. it was initially believed that the relatively low side walls (partly to aid in line of sight) would have left riders feeling vulnerable so it was added primarily to provide a sense of security and to satisfy the insurance underwriter's desire for slip-fall containment (the netting proved useful as something to hold onto while traversing the slide surface after the boat failed to clear a hill and the riders had to evacuate via an exit tower located in each of the valleys). although it seems clear, whether or not the netting was appropriate for a ride such as the verruckt is an open question.
2) none of the boats on these 70 blasters had any sort of seats/restraints whatsoever (they were merely a 3-person raft and in the earliest rides single and double tubes were used). although there was a weight requirement it was not measured directly by a scale, but only by the “honor system” being visually verified by the operator. the ride profiles were timid enough by comparison that neither restraints nor direct weight measurement was a requirement.
3) in the early days the initial loading arrangement was to evenly distribute the weight front to back as best they could. in terms of vehicle performance, a balanced vehicle is generally a more stable vehicle. this didn’t work very well since a large percentage of the water coming from the nozzle would pass underneath the boat and the energy would fail to transfer. to decrease water blow-by, heavier riders were placed in the rear of the boat to keep it more firmly planted. a “flap” or “pocket” was added to the front/underside of the boat in order to catch thrust just as the front of the boat passed over the nozzle instead of having to wait for the entire boat to clear thrusting only at the rear. the “pocket” also helped harness the remaining water that still managed to blow by. whether or not rear-heavy loading was necessary even after the boat re-designs is an open question. based on reports, it appears that for the verruckt the weight distribution was still tilted toward the rear making the front of the boat lighter and susceptible to uplift when subjected to a sufficient lifting force.
4) the 70 blasters built by nbgs had pumps that ran continuously. they never shut off or varied in output during normal operation. apparently the verruckt used pumps with variable frequency drive to save energy. this allowed the pumps to ramp up and down and vary in output during normal operation. how varying pump output may have contributed is an open question.
5) the only part of the previous 70 rides subject to engineering scrutiny requiring a professional seal was the support structure itself. a solid track record together with a growing body of empirical data (gathered after each new ride installation) meant the ride designers themselves were deemed to be the experts for everything ride path related and as such ride paths did not receive an engineer’s critique or review. many waterslide companies utilize software to analyze ride paths and although not perfect when used together with empirical data is a really powerful tool for providing safe designs. whether or not ride path analysis was performed is an open question.
6) the only real issues for blasters in this 12-year period (primarily in the early years) were the pullout radii being too tight for some of the taller drops and potential collisions when boats failed to clear a hill and it went backwards down the slide contacting the trailing boat. larger concave tooling fixed the pullout radius issue and advanced computer control systems that tracked every boat on the ride eliminated collisions. if a boat failed to report (via photo sensor) the control system would shut down the slide in such a way that each boat would be isolated in its own valley thereby preventing collision.
I was not involved in the verruckt project and I don't have any further insights as to how this project progressed through the different phases. nor do I know what was or was not reviewed and what simulations/calculations were actually run for any of the systems or components involved.
just like all of you I have my thoughts on what happened, but without intimate project knowledge and not being there to witness it firsthand I can’t say for sure. this is purely speculation, but i suspect a confluence of things contributed rather than any single cause. potentially a combination of too much nozzle thrust and too tight of a radius at the top of the hill for the given boat velocity (slide dropped away too quickly), a boat too heavily weighted toward the rear (susceptible to front end lift and rear end drop) and the unfortunate encounter with a sufficient head wind (causing the boat to sail). ironically enough (assuming that he didn't fly out completely on his own, rather the restraint coming loose on impact with the netting) the hook and loop strap may have actually saved the two women in the back from even further injury. the weak restraint allowing him to be pulled out of the boat so it could continue on instead of the boat potentially hanging and flipping over backwards if he were firmly strapped in.
imho, it appears that an over-reliance on methods that worked on blasters in the past combined with no real historical understanding of why and how those methods were derived and then evolved (which would have been the starting point for making further modifications to suit this particular version of the blaster) led to this horrible tragedy.
thank you for that information and history. interesting.
p.s. it's a small world after all.
Wow!
I'm still trying to figure out why the tallest water slide in the world needed a bunny hop and water pressure. Had Verruckt been a body slide (less weight less speed) with no hill/hop and a long runway trough for deceleration, this disaster could have been avoided.
We all have shifting priorities.
Jeff - Editor - CoasterBuzz.com - My Blog
August Mueller said:
Had Verruckt been a body slide (less weight less speed) with no hill/hop and a long runway trough for deceleration, this disaster could have been avoided.
Can you imagine? There would have to be a medic stationed at the exit to assist with extraction of suits from the land down under.
Thanks, neokahn, for a very detailed and insightful post. Understanding the background of the blaster rides is very interesting. I would love to see how this engineering developed through the years. Do any of the first 70 rides employ any sort of braking strips or similar devices that mechanically or magnetically slow the rafts? A couple of us were wondering what the black strips that you see on the down-hill parts of these slides.
My pleasure on providing the detail. I did so because many of the design elements on the verruckt appear odd or nonsensical and in many ways they are certainly incompatible with this particular ride design, but when you see the history you can at least begin to understand where these things came from. I figured it would help provide clarity to an otherwise cloudy situation. Many of the elements that will most likely prove to have been fatal on the verruckt worked wonderfully on previous designs and is why they were brought forward when maybe they should not have been.
We never had to use any braking devices on any of the original rides. At least not on the main portion of the ride. We always found ourselves in a situation where we were fighting to maintain as much momentum as we possibly could in order to clear the hills, so there was never any excess energy to dissipate. However, I do recall one instance where we were forced into a very short runout with a fairly large drop leading into it and we had to place the material in the drop section to slow boats down. The material we used was a rubberized conveyor material that was glued down with general adhesive. This worked pretty well for what we needed at the time and could also be what they used.
^I think we shall call you "Dave Jr.".
Thanks for the insight and thought provoking post. I also had a lengthy discussion with a co-worker about this the other day and came to the same conclusion regarding the "combination of errors". Similarly to plane crashes and other catastrophes, if one or two of the criteria had changed, the accident would not have occurred....at least for now.
Thank you for all the background and information neokahn!
On the subject of Jeff Henry, what do you think of this long feature about him? http://grantland.com/features/the-wet-stuff-verruckt-waterslide-schlitterbahn/
It touches the subject of the history of water parks around the world and even has a picture of a prototype Master Blaster. The last part touches the subject of Verruckt.
Thanks for the link. I had read parts of that article before, but never the whole piece. The way I understand and remember things differs a bit from the article. Like the 200 blasters around the world. Unless they are including the offshoot variants then that number is completely overblown. To be fair, I only experienced a narrow sliver of time from my own unique perspective (roughly a 14 year span), so some of the article's content outside of that window I have to take as is.
Within the industry it is quite understood that George Millay is without a doubt the father of water parks. Nobody can argue with that. Jeff fits this mold as well and has made many significant contributions. He is certainly more of a free spirit than was Millay and has a great knack for seeing beyond the boundaries, but as with all eccentrics he can be difficult to digest especially for those who have to work closely with him. He is a very complex individual and most people either love him or hate him with rarely a middle ground. He has often been attributed with successes and accomplishments that were made by those who worked either with or for him. I can name well over a dozen individuals that played an indispensable role in Jeff's success, but who have remained relatively unknown. Jeff gets bored easily and after the initial excitement of a new idea goes away he begins to seek out another. He rarely saw his ideas through to perfection. That was left to others and it was very difficult to make any new technology he devised a profitable enterprise because of this. The blaster stands alone in this regard.
It is only after a significant time away from this environment that I have gained a healthier perspective and can begin to realize and appreciate Jeff for what he truly is. A gifted, free-spirited, spontaneous, in some ways undisciplined, don't bother me with the details, trial and error visionary, who is fiercely loyal to those in his circle, will give you the shirt off his back while at times being brutal in his treatment of the same. It is a very unique person that gets along with Jeff and at the time I can say that I wasn't one of them, but somehow managed to find a way to coexist. At the end of the day I believe he is a good person with the best of intentions who creates waterparks and waterpark rides to make people smile. So I know what happened with the verruckt has been extremely hard on him and the family.
The blaster prototypes were actually really fun to ride back then. They were pretty much plywood and stainless steel cheese graters that ruined many a wetsuit. You couldn’t get me on one of them today. The prototype shown in the piece was for the ride that was taken to the IAAPA trade show in the fall of 1993. It filled a 30’ x 90’ booth and was completely self-contained. Although it did leak onto the floor of the exhibition hall. The original tooling to replace the wooden components was built by WW. A disagreement with WW led to NBGS relocating to a larger facility where they began fabrication of the parts themselves. This is how NBGS got into the fiberglass slide business. Here is the original cad drawing of the prototype.
[image=]
What I find interesting is that in the piece, Jeff Henry trashes both Rick Hunter (co founder of Proslide) and Geoff Chuttler (founder of WhiteWater) and even dares them to build a taller Verruckt.... yet he sold the rights to the Master Blaster to WhiteWater. Then, for MASSIV at his Galveston park, Schlitterbahn went to WhiteWater to get it designed and built.
Rick Hunter and his team came up from with a different way to move boats up hills last year. After experimenting with conveyor belts (Typhoon at Six Flags New England) and LIM's (Wildebeast and Mammoth at Holiday World), they went to water jets for Singha at Siam Park (Tenerife, Canary Islands). Unlike the Master Blaster, the water jets are mounted to the side of the slide section and go into pockets on the side of the raft. There is also no need for nets thanks to the tall wall sides.
I took this picture of one of the RocketBLAST section on Tsunami, the first such slide in North America.
I would imagine that would be very, very uncomfortable to be in the middle of without a raft. I mean, the master blaster looks like it would be pretty bad, too... but something about that just screams "ouch"
I haven't really kept up with water coaster advancements, but it is an interesting design Proslide came up with. Just like the conveyor design that allowed them to side step the sheet flow patents that were in effect at the time these side jets probably create a situation where they still don't have to pay a royalty since it technically isn't sheet flow. Although it looks a lot like Sky Turtle's concepts it is very clever. I suspect they are still using center flume de-watering to evacuate spent water which leads back to Langford's (Surfcoaster - Gravity Groove) patents, but either way got to hand to Hunter for a nice arrangement.
I am sure the key to this design is the same as other water thrust methods where you simply can't let the boat slow down. The loss of momentum causes a lot of issues for rides of this type.
The family of Caleb Schwab, the 10-year-old boy killed on the world's tallest slide at a Kansas water park last year, will receive nearly $20 million in settlements from the companies involved, according to court documents.
http://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/family-boy-killed-kansas-waters...d_nn_fb_ma
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