Why is alpen only open on weekends? What a blue balls I had the last 2 days thinking maybe itll be open. Only to find out im being roasted on facebook for "not looking on their website"
That was my guess but why? Literally EVERY other ride is open. Someone told me maintenance and I said bs the rides open on the weekends and it's going to be for xmas town. What maintenance lol is that why pantheon didn't open till 9:30pm on wednesday? Lol Was closed the entire night until thenMoney. They did this same crap last year too.
What maintenance even is there besides tearing down and rebuilding the trains? Worst case scnerio take a few days to get 1 done and running and at worst do 1 train ops on the thing for your slower days while you work on the other 2 and get them ready for xmas town. Longer wait but atleast it's open and the people who paid for full day tickets are getting their full moneys worth. I know easier said than done though im sure."Maintenance" is still, ultimately, budget, for the record. BGW maintenance is massively underpaid and understaffed. It is possible that it isn't opening because maintenance is stretched too thin on Fridays, but the fix for that is to pay a competitive wage and properly staff the department.
It is operations decision to not run alpengeist. The maintenance resources are there."Maintenance" is still, ultimately, budget, for the record. BGW maintenance is massively underpaid and understaffed. It is possible that it isn't opening because maintenance is stretched too thin on Fridays, but the fix for that is to pay a competitive wage and properly staff the department.
Daily inspection on a coaster is a full shift of work. Sometimes 6-8 hours if nothing goes wrong. An annual teardown and rebuild on just one train takes at least a month.What maintenance even is there besides tearing down and rebuilding the trains? Worst case scnerio take a few days to get 1 done and running and at worst do 1 train ops on the thing for your slower days while you work on the other 2 and get them ready for xmas town. Longer wait but atleast it's open and the people who paid for full day tickets are getting their full moneys worth. I know easier said than done though im sure.
Holy hell a month???? WOWIt is operations decision to not run alpengeist. The maintenance resources are there.
Daily inspection on a coaster is a full shift of work. Sometimes 6-8 hours if nothing goes wrong. An annual teardown and rebuild on just one train takes at least a month.
Yeah, they gotta take the entire train apart, inspect the pieces, replace what needs to be replaced, and rebuild the entire train.Holy hell a month???? WOW
Ugh, don’t let the BGW shills on Facebook gaslight you into thinking it’s your fault. Checking the ride pages on the park’s website before you visit is not a normal thing to do, should not be expected of guests, and is not something the vast majority of guests will even think to do.Why is alpen only open on weekends? What a blue balls I had the last 2 days thinking maybe itll be open. Only to find out im being roasted on facebook for "not looking on their website"
He also went on to say "most regional theme parks do not operate every ride everyday, especially low volume days. I said thats complete bs, sure an actual reason (broken, maintenence) but not just because it's a slow day.Ugh, don’t let the BGW shills on Facebook gaslight you into thinking it’s your fault. Checking the ride pages on the park’s website before you visit is not a normal thing to do, should not be expected of guests, and is not something the vast majority of guests will even think to do.
The expectation should always be that, when the park is open for regular operation and guests are paying to be inside, all the rides that they reasonably can open should be open. That was the norm for decades. The idea that you need to check the ride listings before each visit to see what’s open is not normal. Don’t let anyone try to convince you otherwise.
It’s also not easy to understand this from looking at the website. The homepage makes no mention of limited operations on weekdays. It’s buried, requiring you to have enough foresight to consider that things might be closed and then look into it. This can only be the result of laziness by the park (an absolute lack of focus on transparency and a good guest experience), or they’re deliberately trying to hide their reduced operations so people still come and spend money. The pessimist in me suspects the latter, but both explanations are unacceptable.
That is a BS excuse from that guy. People paying full price expect a full price experience. If any park can't deliver full experience, then the tickets should be discounted accordingly. Exceptions would be due to weather, mechanical or wasps.He also went on to say "most regional theme parks do not operate every ride everyday, especially low volume days. I said thats complete bs, sure an actual reason (broken, maintenence) but not just because it's a slow day.
Nah lets build 3 coasters and a flat ride in the span of 5 years instead.And, like with maintenance, once again, even if you grant these people that it is a staffing shortage problem (very unlikely IMO, but to grant it for the sake of argument), that is still, ultimately, an issue of money. Until BGW pays ride operators running down trains, pushing down restraints for 8+ hours a day the same amount as the people working the register at the McDonald's down the road (where the hours and benefits are also far superior, I might add), nothing at BGW can be honestly assigned to an issue of "staffing shortages."
But it can be attributed to corporate’s unwillingness to provide a bigger labor budget and therefore hire more staff.nothing at BGW can be honestly assigned to an issue of "staffing shortages."
The issue though maybe isn't fully the hours of work.But it can be attributed to corporate’s unwillingness to provide a bigger labor budget and therefore hire more staff.
Oh, and the constant labor hour budgets being so strict they won’t let the people who want hours work, but barely schedule other people.
The teardown question was already addressed above, but more broadly I'll add that every ride comes with a thick and detailed maintenance manual.What maintenance even is there besides tearing down and rebuilding the trains?
Good god well knwoing all that, then how in the hell is there time to do anything to coasters open year round like verbolten or lochness or anything year round. Once its maintenance time then it's down for quite awhile and can't run at all until it's 100% completed right? How do the year round coasters stay openThe teardown question was already addressed above, but more broadly I'll add that every ride comes with a thick and detailed maintenance manual.
As roller coasters are highly engineered pieces of industrial infrastructure that carry people and do dynamically weird things with them, they feature a ton in their manuals pertaining to the acceptable operating condition of the hardware for both its own longevity and the achievement of nearly-perfect human safety. What is every single thing on or around the ride that ever gets visually scanned, checked, measured/inspected, changed, emptied, filled, rotated/cycled, thrown out, or overhauled? What has to happen multiple times per day? Daily? Weekly? Biweekly? Monthly? Bimonthly? Quarterly? Semiannually? Annually? How do you do it all the right way? It's all in there with full procedures, parts lists, instructional diagrams and specs for virtually everything. Much is manufacturer-standard and some can be custom to a certain park. The instructions and considerations and diagrams can run into the hundreds of pages, real or digital, and that's a separate count from the operations manual (which sometimes comprises additional pages in the same document) and the primary collection of technical drawings (which probably is delivered separately).
Foundations? There are procedures. Restraints? There are procedures. Wheels and bogeys? There are procedures. Train structure. Track connections. Supports. Lift components. Brakes. Motors. The many control subsystems. Operator panel. Station and gates. Procedures, procedures, procedures. Schedules. Specifics. And parts and features. So many parts and features. Every bolted connection. Every weld. Every air gate. Every compressed air tank. Every sensor. Every coupler. This is a very partial list.
The maintenance manual is so critical to a new ride's approval to run and to its subsequent safe operation that not only is its delivery a hard requirement at any major park I have ever been familiar with, but in certain past cases parks have contractually withheld final payment to a ride supplier until the manual was delivered in full, reviewed by park or corporate engineering staff, and verified as acceptably complete.
Oh, and maintenance procedures get updates over time too. Here is a cool little collection of technical bulletins for Nitro, just 4 short ones from 20+ years ago. There are surely many more at this point. These important updates to inspection and service procedures happen all the time based on what a manufacturer sees "in the wild."
Additionally, parks may add their own additional procedures to the manufacturer's specified set. So the notion of a full inspection slate is itself a (slowly) moving target over time.
Crazy essential.
They go really fast. Lots of hours in the shop. It takes a lot to run a park year round that was designed to run 7 months a year.Good god well knwoing all that, then how in the hell is there time to do anything to coasters open year round like verbolten or lochness or anything year round. Once its maintenance time then it's down for quite awhile and can't run at all until it's 100% completed right? How do the year round coasters stay open
It's been 20+ years since I got this answer - but at one time when I wanted to get into engineering school I talked to the fine people at USO and they have people trained for specific parts or rides, and depending on the labor budget of the park you might even be highly specialized to one ride. So for way back then for Hulk they had 4 people trained on trains alone, 2 on braking systems, 2 on launch, 2 on footers, 4 on track. And they mostly worked overnights on the ride so you didn't see them out there during the day.Good god well knwoing all that, then how in the hell is there time to do anything to coasters open year round like verbolten or lochness or anything year round. Once its maintenance time then it's down for quite awhile and can't run at all until it's 100% completed right? How do the year round coasters stay open
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