I think some much time has past in regards to Intamin that people start to forget and they only remember how insanely intense Intamin coasters are so they continue to ride them/buy them.
Jonquil said:Speaking of Intamin and safety, I recently visited my new "home away from home park", Oakwood Park in Wales, where there is an Intamin giant flume ride, once called "Hydro" now called "Drenched", upon which there was a restraint-failure death in 2004, and a scary lift-chain snap incident last year...
Two workers quizzed over 'human error ' in Alton Towers horror: Engineer turned off automatic safety lock then operator let truck slam into stalled carriage
• Failure to follow basic safety procedures led to devastating accident
• Staff are still working at the park while criminal investigation underway
• Raises questions about the safety features on the Smiler and other rides
By NICK CRAVEN FOR THE MAIL ON SUNDAY
PUBLISHED: 17:56 EST, 22 August 2015 | UPDATED: 07:19 EST, 23 August 2015
Two staff from Alton Towers are under investigation over the horrific Smiler ride crash that seriously injured four people, including two young women who each lost a leg.
The Mail on Sunday has learned that human error and a failure to follow basic safety procedures led to the devastating accident.
An engineer overrode an automatic safety lock, allowing the ride operator to send the carriage full of people careering into an empty vehicle that had ‘stalled’ further down the track.
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Our revelations – particularly the fact that staff are able to perform manual overrides at all – will raise disturbing questions about the safety features on the Smiler and other rides.
This newspaper understands that despite the blunder, both employees involved are still working at the park, though in different roles, while a criminal investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) is under way.
Student Leah Washington, 18, had her left leg amputated after the collision on June 2. Boyfriend Joe Pugh, 18, had both knees smashed. Dancer Vicky Balch, 20, had her right leg amputated below the knee three weeks afterwards.
Sources at the Staffordshire theme park told this newspaper how problems earlier in the day on the Smiler had resulted in an engineer being called.
These accounts tally with our exclusive interviews with Leah and Joe, who both recalled boarding a carriage when they reached the head of the queue, then being asked to disembark so the vehicle could be sent round without passengers.
Crucially, that empty carriage never completed a circuit, possibly because of high winds, and failed to make it up the ‘bat wing’ section of the ride, rolling back down the slope and coming to a rest.
The most fundamental safeguard on the German-built ride is that two carriages should never be able to travel on the same section of track because sensors trigger braking devices to prevent it.
When the 16 passengers, including Leah and Joe, were loaded into a carriage for the second time, it was halted at the top of the first upward section as the automatic brakes kicked in.
The computerised safety system was working perfectly as the sensors were being told there was another carriage on the same section of track, even if operating staff were inexplicably unaware of it.
The teenagers recalled being held at the top of the section for about ten minutes, but did not know why. Joe said: ‘It was really windy and we were freezing up there.
‘I said to Leah, “Something’s not right here – this shouldn’t be happening.” ’
Meanwhile, an engineer engaged a manual override, allowing the carriage with passengers to continue once the ride operator had restarted the system.
One Mail on Sunday source within Alton Towers said: ‘The engineer should never have manually overridden the safety lock with people on the track.’
An HSE spokesman said yesterday: ‘Our inquiry continues.’ Merlin Entertainments said: ‘We continue to work closely with the HSE as it investigates the causes of the incident and we are unable to comment further.’
Shane said:I still feel like Gerstleur delivered Alton Towers with a subpar product with a terrible design in the first place.
On top of that the subcontractor that designed the control system should make sure this can't happen in future installations. In what reality would you want to dispatch even an empty train when the blocks aren't clear?
Unagi said:While the Gerstlauer name may be on the ride, it was John Wardley who designed it (and all of Alton Tower's major coasters). Gerstlauer fabricated and gave them what they wanted.
The subcontractor that designed the Smiler control systems had all the safety protocols in place. They were manually overridden by a park engineer. Any control system at any park can be overridden if need be. In this case, the park screwed up big time by doing that.
Shane said:I wasn't aware of that. Even so, don't you think Gerstlauer should have known it wouldn't work, and suggested a different layout? The ride regularly failed to complete its circuit.
I know it was an override, but I remember reading that depending on who installed the system there are just certain things you can't override. I don't claim to be an expert on the subject at all just throwing in my two cents in the aftermath of it all.
When the blocks not being clear isn't reality.In what reality would you want to dispatch even an empty train when the blocks aren't clear?
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