chickenking said:Is that piece of equipment a new ride?
Yamifj1200 said:That's a very small track hoe on the end of the bridge. Nothing fishy really, on average they weigh less than 8,000 lbs.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/2006-Caterpillar-303C-CR-Mini-Excavator-Thumb-/221317174094?pt=Excavators&hash=item338788134e
Much less weight than the bridge full of guests.... HTH
Eric M
James said:They are also destroying the bridge so why would the park care what weight is on it now?
James said:In theater when we use a flying system. The max weight we put on it is usually only 25% of what it can actually hold. We do this in case the system gets a shock load ( a sudden jerk) and to allow room for error in weight. My guess is the same rules apply for the bridge when it was in operation. So yes I'm sure it can hold that back hoe with ease but the park would never want to push it to that level of strain when people were on it.
This is called the safety factor (SF), and it is a standard part of any static or moving structural design. It provides not only for shock loading, but also for possible material defects, construction errors, lazy setup/usage, inaccurate design assumptions, the effects of age, and other real-world aspects that can't be perfectly designed for.James said:In theater when we use a flying system. The max weight we put on it is usually only 25% of what it can actually hold. We do this in case the system gets a shock load ( a sudden jerk) and to allow room for error in weight. My guess is the same rules apply for the bridge when it was in operation. So yes I'm sure it can hold that back hoe with ease but the park would never want to push it to that level of strain when people were on it.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.