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I don't want it to burn down before we get to ride it! I'd settle for some theming and more vegetation. I really love that Greek mini hamlet that was floated on here.

Yeah, more a fan of lasting scenery additions though adding a legit gyros place in there couldn't hurt.

Even if added pyro doesn't burn anything down there's a good chance it'll stop working after a while and not be fixed - in addition to losing the spark of what would make the effect special over time anyways.
 
The ride does look good, but it needs a good night time effect. I commented on the video about this. Anyone else besides me feel the ride could benefit from night time pyrotechnics? I have the perfect spiel for it once your seats are checked.

(Dispatch spiel)
Riders; before embarking on on your challenge against the Gods; please sit back, with hands and feet in the train and enjoy your ride.

As the finishes the turn to approach the launch; a speaker should play a spiel that says "PREPARE TO TEST YOUR MIGHT". Low ember pyrotechnics would flare up, on the trains first attempt to make it up the top hat. It's failed attempt should dissipate the embers. During the second attempt the pyrotechnics flare up to maximum down the entire launch.
Gimme some serious fog effects and lighting in the swing launch area , that would be terrific.
 
Off topic for sure, but can you prove that the Golden Ticket awards weren't what they were advertising up until they lost that category and were conveniently able to switch to a different award?

On topic - ok, so before this edit I was obviously thinking of AC and not Pantheon, my bad.
Off topic, but on the website and anywhere they refer to themselves as World's Most Beautiful Theme Park they refer back to NAPHA. It's been like that for years.
 
I’m just waiting to experience the intamin whack that is the trick track airtime hills into the swing launch. That and the headchopper under the drop.
 
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Some of the in-line spiels at SFA now say "to 76 inches" .. wonder how many thousands taller have already ridden?
 
The max height seems pretty arbitrary. People can have different ratios of torso to leg length.

For instance, I'm torso long. Sitting down I'm at eye level with a 6'8 friend of mine who is a full 6 inches taller than me.
 
The max height seems pretty arbitrary. People can have different ratios of torso to leg length.

For instance, I'm torso long. Sitting down I'm at eye level with a 6'8 friend of mine who is a full 6 inches taller than me.
Unless of course the head chopper is really closer then we think.
 
There's no way they designed a ride where anyone over 6'4 can't ride it. Not to mention there's no way they designed a head chopper that someone could have the chance of touching. Normally they'd have everything WELL out of reach of anyone riding to prevent any situation from even coming close to happening.
 
There is precedent for the 76" max height, ultra-irritatingly. Intamin has annoyed me with this for more than 15 years now.

Superman at SFNE was the ride that taught me I would sometimes have to wear the thinnest-soled shoes I own and slouch a bit if I wanted to ride certain rides, and that started in the early 2000s. Same max height there, 76". They might have made that change after the fatal accident, or maybe the ride opened that way. Don't remember. But they had a little swing-stick thing mounted at the queue entrance, 76" off the ground, and for a time there was an attendant paying attention to it sporadically to make sure no giants got aboard. If the swing-stick hit you in the head, you didn't get to ride.

VelociCoaster, as far as I know, has no such max height, leading me to suspect it's not about seat or restraint configuration, nor about reach with respect to components or corners of the rolling stock itself. Of course, the vehicles could be different at Universal in a way that establishes a key difference in this area. I really have no idea.

Some other possibilities:
  • The max height policy is optional, perhaps suggested rather than required by Intamin, leading to the question of why to have it in the first place
  • There is a simple difference between what the two parks' respective insurers are willing to allow, perhaps in connection with the item above
  • It's a reach issue, lateral or upward, regarding the proximity of stationary trackside (or overhead?) items, probably net of a very conservative safety margin juuuuuuust to be sure. While I'd be surprised if Intamin cut the design too close in the one most obvious place on the ride -- especially given modern design tools -- it's not like there is no precedent there...
 
There is precedent for the 76" max height, ultra-irritatingly. Intamin has annoyed me with this for more than 15 years now.

Superman at SFNE was the ride that taught me I would sometimes have to wear the thinnest-soled shoes I own and slouch a bit if I wanted to ride certain rides, and that started in the early 2000s. Same max height there, 76". They might have made that change after the fatal accident, or maybe the ride opened that way. Don't remember. But they had a little swing-stick thing mounted at the queue entrance, 76" off the ground, and for a time there was an attendant paying attention to it sporadically to make sure no giants got aboard. If the swing-stick hit you in the head, you didn't get to ride.

VelociCoaster, as far as I know, has no such max height, leading me to suspect it's not about seat or restraint configuration, nor about reach with respect to components or corners of the rolling stock itself. Of course, the vehicles could be different at Universal in a way that establishes a key difference in this area. I really have no idea.

Some other possibilities:
  • The max height policy is optional, perhaps suggested rather than required by Intamin, leading to the question of why to have it in the first place
  • There is a simple difference between what the two parks' respective insurers are willing to allow, perhaps in connection with the item above
  • It's a reach issue, lateral or upward, regarding the proximity of stationary trackside (or overhead?) items, probably net of a very conservative safety margin juuuuuuust to be sure. While I'd be surprised if Intamin cut the design too close in the one most obvious place on the ride -- especially given modern design tools -- it's not like there is no precedent there...
It is most likely a suggested restriction that Busch is choosing to abide by. Technically, B&M won't let you on their rides if intoxicated, but Busch ignore that (obviously) and it doesn't even make the sign. Most likely, the height restriction is a rider comfort issue, with the riders head above the headrest. Like others have stated, it's all about torso vs leg length.
I'm kinda on the edge for comfort on a lot of intamin rides, with my head being mostly above the headrest, but I'm only 6'. I would be surprised if the park actually enforces it as I would guess most manufacturers have a max height, but nobody cares since it is more a comfort issue than a safety one.
 
There's no way they designed a ride where anyone over 6'4 can't ride it. Not to mention there's no way they designed a head chopper that someone could have the chance of touching. Normally they'd have everything WELL out of reach of anyone riding to prevent any situation from even coming close to happening.
You guys do realize that was a joke right?
 
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