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El Toro_Ryan

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Posts posted by El Toro_Ryan

  1. ^I don't really remember having an unpleasant ride on KK and I thought the thing some people didn't like about the launch was the fact that it seems to come in stages instead of just one long blast. (I have no complaints, though)

     

    The thing I don't like about the launch is that the train doesn't track very well and the back of it shimmies back and forth as it accelerates. IMHO, the only decent seat on Ka is in the front row. I don't know what they did different than TTD, but I've never experienced that issue on Dragster--every seat is a good seat.

     

    I noticed that on Dragster too when I was at Cedar Point a few days ago. I rode in the backseat and it was very smooth. I think Kingda Ka's problem is that the trains are too bulky and top heavy with the over the shoulder restraints. With lapbars, TTD carries a lot of its weight low to the track. But for Ka, the locking mechanisms are located on the seats making the trains more top heavy. Give the train a little shuffle from the launch and physics will take over. Also, Kingda Ka's launch track is much higher off the ground by the end of the launch then TTD's which gives the track more wiggle room which might contribute to the roughness. I've always felt like Ka should have been built with lateral supports on the launch track in addition to the simple straight columns. You can really see the launch track wobble when the train launches down the track. Much more so than TTD.

    262710475_katrain.thumb.jpg.fe54d9fb56abc2413e0139740fc9aaca.jpg

    Notice the extra bulk behind the seats and at the head rests for the shoulder restraints.

    358684357_ttdtrain.thumb.jpg.ba7e24492c0c7c9576f9244c85d9dc92.jpg

    Verse this.

  2. The park was insanely crowded today. We were expecting 35,000 people and I think we easily received more. The entire parking lot was filled and so was the over flow lot on my way out. I guess that's what happens when you combine memorial day weekend with an R5 concert (They'r'e apparently very popular but I've never heard of them until today lol)

     

    I also talked to a few maintenance people and so far, the only good answer I have gotten regarding El Toro's slowed down lift was to save on wear and tear both for the ride and lift motor. I still haven't asked the most knowledgeable person there yet so I'll let you know what he says.

  3. Ever since they slowed down the lift, the ride has run noticably slower. However, since then I've only noticed it running slower in the morning.

     

    why and when did they slow down the lift?

    I don't know exactly when but I guess they did it to reduce the speed of the ride (especially in the first drop) probably to decrease wear, maybe Ryan knows a bit more.

     

    That's what I'd guess. I'll ask one of the maintenance dudes next time I work and see what they know.

  4. Ever since they slowed down the lift, the ride has run noticably slower. However, since then I've only noticed it running slower in the morning.

     

    This is not true, the ride runs just as fast as it did when it opened. The ride still hasn't hit its full summer time speeds yet this season. We haven't received high enough temperatures and the ride has not run enough. During the summer time, the ride will average about 35mph past one of the last sensors into the break run but we still haven't gone that fast yet. The ride will though as it does every year, just give it some time. El Toro is heavily affected by colder weather (more so than the rest of the roller coasters in the park) and the cold nights we've still been having have taken blows at the ride hitting its full potential. Hope that answers all of your questions.

  5. ^Really? Shouldn't it be the same as it is in the same car?

     

    No, you'd think that though. Picture on the first drop, the farther back you are on the train, the more of a whip the train gets. By the time the second to last row starts going down the drop, the train is already going pretty quick. It continues to gain speed and then the back row starts going down the drop. So the back row hits the drop a little faster giving more airtime. But honestly, the difference on El Toro between rows in the same car is minimal and so is the roughness. I test ride it every morning in empty trains where it's actually more bumpy than in a full train and it's not uncomfortable in anyway. I could ride it all day.

     

    Hey Ryan I think you were working ET yesterday morning. I'll be back today, and I'll say hi. The only "semi-rough" part of ET is the the turn around after the main drops. Lot's of up and down bouncing, but I try to push up out of the seat. Any plans to do a little work on that? If so it would need to happen this week as I think you start daily operations after Memorial day. Yes, I too can ride it all day, but a little work on that one part would make it perfect! It still runs great after all those year... Definitely my #1 by a long shot.

     

    Unfortunatelly, work like that is all done during the off season. How you see El Toro will be how it is all season. The offseason leading into this season saw minor parts of the ride receive track work.

     

    Great ride both times but I have to say felt a little slow. Anyone know if it is because it was early? I feel like I remember there being discussion about that.

     

    El Toro runs much slower in the morning than the rest of the day as do almost all coasters. It's just more noticeable on El Toro because of all the airtime it's capable of delivering and how noticeable the difference in airtime is in the morning, especially during the 2nd half of the ride. Once the wheels warm up a bit, she flies through the course.

  6. ^Really? Shouldn't it be the same as it is in the same car?

     

    No, you'd think that though. Picture on the first drop, the farther back you are on the train, the more of a whip the train gets. By the time the second to last row starts going down the drop, the train is already going pretty quick. It continues to gain speed and then the back row starts going down the drop. So the back row hits the drop a little faster giving more airtime. But honestly, the difference on El Toro between rows in the same car is minimal and so is the roughness. I test ride it every morning in empty trains where it's actually more bumpy than in a full train and it's not uncomfortable in anyway. I could ride it all day.

     

    Hey Ryan I think you were working ET yesterday morning. I'll be back today, and I'll say hi. The only "semi-rough" part of ET is the the turn around after the main drops. Lot's of up and down bouncing, but I try to push up out of the seat. Any plans to do a little work on that? If so it would need to happen this week as I think you start daily operations after Memorial day. Yes, I too can ride it all day, but a little work on that one part would make it perfect! It still runs great after all those year... Definitely my #1 by a long shot.

     

    Unfortunatelly, work like that is all done during the off season. How you see El Toro will be how it is all season. The offseason leading into this season saw minor parts of the ride receive track work.

     

    Great ride both times but I have to say felt a little slow. Anyone know if it is because it was early? I feel like I remember there being discussion about that.

     

    El Toro runs much slower in the morning than the rest of the day as do almost all coasters. It's just more noticeable on El Toro because of all the airtime it's capable of delivering and how noticeable the difference in airtime is in the morning, especially during the 2nd half of the ride. Once the wheels warm up a bit, she flies through the course.

  7. ^Really? Shouldn't it be the same as it is in the same car?

     

    No, you'd think that though. Picture on the first drop, the farther back you are on the train, the more of a whip the train gets. By the time the second to last row starts going down the drop, the train is already going pretty quick. It continues to gain speed and then the back row starts going down the drop. So the back row hits the drop a little faster giving more airtime. But honestly, the difference on El Toro between rows in the same car is minimal and so is the roughness. I test ride it every morning in empty trains where it's actually more bumpy than in a full train and it's not uncomfortable in anyway. I could ride it all day.

  8. Let's be honest here, Timberliner retrofits don't have a very good track record. Hades 360 is rough as ever, and Holiday World completely cancelled their retrofit after almost five years of work. Even the millennium flyer retrofit to Gwazi has not helped. Additionally, Six Flags St. Louis has a huge stockpile of Gerstlaur train parts from Twisted Twins and Mega Zeph. Re-tracking and re-conditioning of the trains would be a more sensible fix. A full topper-track replacement could also be a good option.

     

    Agree. A Timberliner retrofit would only work out if the Boss received a complete retracking and ledger adjustment to basically make the ride new again. Timberliners are very submissive to the track that they run on and running them on roughened track would only make the ride rougher as a result (hence Hades 360). Buying new trains and essentially completely revitalizing the coaster probably outweighs the cost of the park continuing to use the Gerstlaur trains it already has and just retracking bits or adding topper track to save on maintenance costs.

  9. (These are all in the backseat lol)

    Cedar Point - Millennium's first drop

    Dorney Park - Hyda's first drop

    Six Flags Great Adventure - El Toro's first drop

    Kings Dominion - Intimidator 305's first drop

    Carowinds - Intimidator's first drop

    Busch Gardens Tampa - Sheikra's first drop

    Busch Gardens Williamsburg - Loch Ness Monster's first drop (I really liked that one for some reason, lots of airtime)

  10. Well that's impressive. Does the train really have to enter the station for the other one to go or does it only need to clear the first brake section?

     

    The train does have to enter the station in order for the next train to crest the lift hill. It's how the blocking of the ride works.

     

    I wonder why the Nitro crew is having so many issues this year. They have always dispatched trains as the one ahead of it is clearing the lift. Hopefully they return to that by the start of summer. So long as people fit the El Toro crew has always been amazing.

     

    It's probably just new employees getting into the groove of things. And yeah, when everyone on the train fits, we can have trains ready to dispatch before the train on the course even reaches the Rolling Thunder Hill.

  11. Despite being a new ride, the station doesnt scream "new." The concept art was pretty and theyv'e stuck to it fairly well. But in the concept art there were murals inside the square panels on the front of goliath's station building. Hopefully those will be installed before the opening! They would really give it some visual interest and better tie the building in with the sign. There are other details missing that we may or may not actually get, but hopefully we do! (I'm seeing though in the recent photographs that wood paneling has been painted where there were originally columns in the concept art )

    goliath.jpg.1d53a866fe93d08daaf0faac03930169.jpg

  12. I'd just like to give my fellow El Toro crew members a shoutout. While I was working the entrance at the end of my shift today, I saw them dispatching trains so quickly that several trains had to stop on the lift hill cause the prior train still hadn't fully entered the station. I also saw that Nitro wasn't double stacking as I was walking out of work so hopefully everything there is worked out. Also, the park is adding a lot of landscaping to the Zumanjaro quene area and it looks gorgeous so far. I can't wait to see how it looks when it's finished.

  13. Wow. That is so Walmart like.

     

    When I walk into a very clean park with several 25 million dollar plus rides and lots of fairly happy employees, I don't think walmart. When I am paying $8 for fries and $35 for a sweatshirt, I do not think Walmart. Have you ever worked for either Walmart or Six Flags? If so, I would love to hear some real reasons why Six Flags is anything like walmart in anyway shape or form. Honestly, how much more complex of a lighting package do you need on the ride? Top Thrill Dragster has essentially the same exact thing and I have never heard any complaints. There are homes within 10 feet of the park's borders and an airport a few miles away. I doubt either of those would really appreciate a thousand lights on a 456ft tall structure. There is a difference between practical and cheap. If a single spotlight is all you need to do the trick, than I wouldn't call having just that "cheaping out".

     

    I don't understand all of the sudden Gadv hate. Yeah, the park is going through some growing pains rights now and has some weird dead ends, but in reality its got one the best collections of rides out there and a fairly nice atmosphere. Golden Kingdom and PDC are two of the nicest areas in any Six Flags or Cedar Fair parks out there. Both cost a fortune and nobody wants to bring them up when comparing the park to Walmart.

     

    End rant.

     

    I feel the park lacks details, such as theming on many of the rides, or had them, and let them go to crap like the following year. and out the 3 parks I have been to this season so far, its by far the dirtiest. that's why I consider them like walmart. and yes, I worked a handful of season at SFGadv in the 1990's in rides.

     

    This thread is full of fighting and complaining, jeez. haha Let's settle this. Walmart and GADV are nothing alike. First off, the only thing dirty about Walmart is maybe some of the people that shop there, but that makes for some hilarious internet pictures. GADV isn't even a dirty park. Sure it's the cleanest place in the world but it's hard to keep a place spotless that serves nearly three million guests a year, and I think the park does a damn good job for what it can. I work at GADV currently and my supervisors are constantly picking up trash and as employees, we are taught to clean up any garbage we see lying around. Even our park president walks around the park everyday just picking up trash. We take cleanliness seriously. Walmart charges almost nothing for its products while GADV prices things at typical expensive amusement park prices. I see no similarities. Walmart is a store, GADV is an amusement park. Again, I see no similarities. And having a light placed on Kingda Ka is better than nothing at all. Like honestly, does it really matter how it was rigged. It works and serves its purpose. We can complain all we want but it won't change anything. I'm sure management has a multiyear plan for the park already worked out to smooth out the dead ends and round the park out more. Just give the park some time. haha Let's focus our energy on Zumanjaro. The ride opens this month!!!

  14. Heading to Six flags next weekend. I have read about the size of ppl getting on the coasters. Everyone is much taller than me. I am 5'1, 243lbs , 49.5 chest, 45/46 waist and 50.5 hips.... is this going to be a huge problem?

     

    Hard to say. They like to staple people on El Toro, so that might be a bit tough for you.

     

    Haha We don't actually enjoy stapling people on El Toro. It shouldn't be a problem on a majority of the rides besides maybe El Toro. If anything, there's a test seat right in front of the entrance that actually has a light to verify if you can ride.

  15. I think I know why they are so slow. Since it is a station wait they probably do it to lengthen the line. In the last year it was running I went to GASM and they were only running one train. The ride op said it was to make it seem popular. So since they have a history with this maybe they're doing it purposely

     

    That's not the case with Bizarro. The ride opens with 3 trains everyday and then reduces if needed. Bizarro is actually one of the hardest rides to hit its capacity on in the park. With most rides, the next train is advanced into the station only seconds after the train before it was dispatched but Bizarro's next train doesn't actually fully park with the floor up until the train before is half way up the lift hill. And then when we dispatch the next train, there's like a 5 or 10 second delay while we wait for the floor to drop. I know the crew there could be a little faster but those factors slow things down. haha I recently got trained on Bizarro so if I ever work at it, I'll see if I can make things any faster for you guys. And honestly, I think it's time we all stop complaining about the park. haha Be grateful for what you have!! I'm sure there's people who live hours away from the closest theme park who would love to call GADV their home park.

  16. if your going to do anything at the entrance outside to speed things up, is make the heavy people try the test seat. they are the ones that slow the line down big time.

     

    You're not the first one to suggest that actually. It's a great idea but we are technically not allowed to single out heavy people to make them try the test seat. Our world is too sensitive. haha Like when we have to kick someone off a ride for being too big, we can't even mention that they were too big to ride.

  17. If you height check in the station then why bother at all with checking height at the entrance. If your entrance person who's supposed to measure is letting people slip by then they're doing their job wrong. Either you measure everyone or you don't.

     

    It's not that the entrance person purposely lets people slip by. It gets crowded as hell there sometimes. There's only so many people you can see in a crowd of people walking through your line. haha Sometimes you miss people. However, usually bags slip through the entrance rather than people who are too short cause bags are usually harder to notice. And again, its our goal to have things flow nicely in the station so that we don't have to waste time explaining things to people who cannot ride. That's why we height check at the entrance of the line to make sure everyone is tall enough. But due to safety regulations, we do have to height check again before people board a ride. Hope that answers your question. haha

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