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signaltwo

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Posts posted by signaltwo

  1. Am I the only one with a thing for onboard audio? I love the Bizarro makeover so much more than I did Medusa - minus not being able to sit next to friends in the back row.

    Never ridden Bizarro, but audio makes everything better. It is AMAZING how much your rides on screamin will vary if you get a music free train as opposed to a music train. If the audio is EVER broken on SCreamin I insist on riding it again, because it makes the experience MUCH better!

     

    On board audio can improve a ride experience, but when the audio is only clearly audible on the lift and brakes and sounds scratchy and fuzzy, continuously dropping out throughout the rest of the ride it's a different story.

  2. Can't wait to one day be a ride attendant, or an operator at one of the big rides (namely, Goliath, which is my favorite), if realizing it will be possible sometime by the end of the summer.

     

    It's definitely a different job. You'll probably got trained on at least 3 rides throughout the season if not more. Somehow I managed to only get trained on coasters so it's certainly possibly to only get the "big" rides.

     

    I deserve this job because I'll kill anyone to run three trains without stacking on Tatsu.

     

    I'm sure you'd have fun sprinting all day

  3. Hi, guys,

     

    I was wondering if there were any of you guys going to be at the Job Fair this Saturday?

     

    I just submitted my online application .I have a preference for ride operator/attendant.

     

     

    Regarding the job fair, is business attire mandatory and is the inperson interview the first of many interviews? What may be asked at the in person interviews?

     

    (Never had a job before so I'm nervous and not sure what to expect).

     

    I don't work at Magic Mountain but I'm assuming its job fair will be pretty similar to Gadv's job fair. There will be a ton of people in hoodies, jeans, t-shirts, you name it. But like the poster before me said, it's always good to look your best and make a good impression. Be friendly and express interest in the job you applied for, ask questions pertaining to your responsibilities as a ride op. Oh, another important thing to remember is that the job fair will be PACKED. Just be ready to wait, and wait, and wait before you're called.

     

    Gadv was my first job as well and I think my interview last season at lasted a total of 5 minutes. I'm afraid to know how long I was waiting for. I was asked a couple questions relating to the department and asked more basic questions about working as a team, being a leader, why I wanted to work for them, etc. It's pretty simple but don't automatically think you have the job just by showing up. Do your best, be confident, relax and I'm sure you'll be attending a ride in no time. I would say coaster, but don't assume that either.

  4. For some weird reason, it's always the B&M Inverted Coaster models that seem to rank as some of the most intense and possibly the most best B&M coasters around.

     

    Batman The Ride at Six Flags Great Adventure was deffinately the most intense B&M I have ever ridden. I love B&M's mega coasters and Superman Ultimate Flight's pretzel loop was intense, but nothing comes close to Batman.

     

    I grayed/blacked out on both loops and got a numbing and sort of hurting feeling in my feet. Too intense for me, but, I can understand how many people love them.

     

    I would love to get on Nemesis, Nemesis Inferno, Black Mamba, and Flight Deck. They look really awesome.

     

    I agree with you. I'd have to say Batman at SFGAdv, that first three inversions almost always make me gray out, like the previous poster said. And then the following corkscrews throw you around like a rag doll. Even slamming to a stop on the brake run is pretty forceful.

     

    Also, although Batman's neighbor Nitro is probably one of the smoothest, floater filled coasters I've ridden it's upward helix definitely packs a punch.

  5.  

    Assuming they are running both sides and the trains are full (6 people per train, per side), that would give an hourly capacity of about 2000 riders/hour.

     

    Pretty good, but there are other disney rides that do even better. I know Pirates of the Caribbean is well over 3000 people/hour.

     

    The Omnimovers must get a pretty high throughput too, Spaceship Earth's line could be wayyyy out the door but that line will be constantly moving.

  6. ^Or Theoretical = Knoebels, Actual = Six Flags

     

    This just made my -entire- week. It could be the best single statement about the craptacular efficiency of certain parks...

     

    However, I do recall the ops at Demon at SFGam being some of the -fastest- moving people I've ever seen- keeping three trains loaded, dispatched and returned without stacking.

     

    R.D.

     

    In all fairness Arrow loopers are probably the easiest trains to load and check, no seat belts, nothing extra. That was one of the main reasons I liked working GASM at SFGadv. I'd hope they'd be getting plenty off roll-ins. Otherwise something is not right at that platform.

  7. The more accurate way to do it would probably be to do use on of the formulas above, but the "guesstimated" way it is done at rides is by using the turnstile. Either you take the number off the turnstile itself, or take the number off the turnstile counter in the rides operator booth.

     

    Assuming the counter has been reset that is, I know we lost our counter key for a few days so at one point we started the day with a number of 15,000 or so. Thank whoever invented calculators.

     

    Anyway, for hour 1 you would put down whatever is on the counter. That's how many people have come through the turnstile. For example you have 800 guests come through during hour 1. During hour 2 you have another 900 guests come through. The counter however will only display 1700. All you would do is simply subtract the first number by the total. For hour 3 you would add the first two hours together, and subtract the total by the first two hours. There is your total for hour three right there. You add each previous hour together, subtract it from the total being displayed on the counter and you'll have your hourly total.

     

    After getting your turnstile hourly total, you would also add non-turnstile guests to the number. Those guests who board the ride using an exit pass or staying on with a certain, platinum, ridiculous, thingy. Usually that number stays in the 20-30 range for my ride.

     

    I'm thinking that every park should have a single rider line for thewre coasters. How many times have people watched coasters in line and spot like 3-9 empty seats? On Roar at SFDK I stood in line for nearly a hour and rode by myself on the very front since my dad didn't want to ride. Medusa (Also SFDK) is okay at least since it's a high capacity coaster and had the best crew for the 2010 season IMHO.

     

    But rides like kong and roar where there's a max of 24 seat's with lines longer then 200+, it's horrible for single riders. "Oh look a empty seat. I could actually be riding right now."

     

    Single riders lines are generally the type of thing that looks better on paper than in reality. If done correctly it can be wonderful, if not however it can be a nightmare. First off, you'd need assigned seating like Disney does. You'd have the seat filled before the train even starts loading because the single rider would be waiting with the standby line rider at the airgate. Rock N Roller coaster is pretty good at this (not saying single rider is quick, they just fill empty seats well when available).

     

    At parks that allow riders to choose their own rows you wouldn't be able to fill those empty seats early, everyone would have to get on and only after the gates have been closed would you be able to start filling seats. The ride crew could be using this time to check the train but instead are still working on filling the empty seats, it would just add time to check the train and dispatch it. It's much faster on most rides to just "load and go". All the added time of reopening harnesses, opening gates, rechecking the train wouldn't be worth it. It'd be quicker for everyone to just wait for the next train to pull into the station.

  8. ^They probably just say that to keep the GP off them, I don't know how many times I was asked working at Six Flags if the restraint on the coaster was the only thing keeping them in. The ride has four (two of which that are in plain view to the guests) restraint mechanisms.

     

    Interesting thing about Cedar Fair is from while working at Cedar Point, I was told by very reliable sources that their seatbelt addiction doesn't do anything for their insurance rates (as many people who work there theorize). It is part of their "commitment to safety". I call it a commitment to overkill in some cases.

     

    Or commitment to paranoia maybe. If only most GP knew how to buckle their own seatbelts I'm sure the ride crew could fly through checking the train and just give a quick tug on the end of the belt.

  9. I've heard of a couple versions, but basically a kid wants to ride Space Mountain but is too short or the ride is broken--what do you do? Funny thing is, I heard about that question so much on boards and Facebook that I was pretty much expecting to get it, but I interviewed at both resorts & didn't get it for either. So I guess it just depends on your interviewer.

     

    Ah ok thanks, who knows maybe they started using it less because of how many people know about it. Sounds like one of the questions from when I got interviewed for Six Flags.

     

     

    Yes.

     

    I requested attractions as well. However, I described a past job experience (working concession stands during the Little League World Series with my mom) which pertained to Merchandise, and that was the role I ended up with.

     

    Not that it's a bad role, mind you. I would much rather be moving around to different stores along Main Street and dancing along with guests during Move It Shake It Celebrate It than be stuck cooped up in a station building.

     

    I can see how some people would enjoy that sort of interaction with the guests more, I certainly wouldn't mind getting a role like Merchandise at all. I'd just prefer Attractions, I'm already used to the being cooped up in a station part of it ;D

  10. I'm thinking of doing the College Program as well, it won't be until at least next year but it's still in my plans. I am however curious what this famous space mountain question I've been hearing about even is. Anyone care to enlighten me?

     

    Also, do you think having experience in working in a theme park and working in the rides department will help at all in getting an attractions role? I know it's highly requested so I wouldn't expect it.

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