I forgot about all the electrical systems that’ll need to be installed in order to power this ride. Due to that alone it’ll probably be another several months at minimum until we hear anything regarding track shipments
As in the coaster track is in the US already?Isn’t it more likely that they’re imported already and awaiting for tariff clarity to receive them to mitigate the financial impact?
Also, Magic Mountain just started receiving track from Vekoma, so they weren't phased by the tariff rates. Unless the thrill glider was intended for the 2025 season and they pushed it back a year, someone else would have to chime in.
retarded
At best, it's just trashy and disruptive. At worst, it could be a rules violation.
Also, Magic Mountain just started receiving track from Vekoma, so they weren't phased by the tariff rates. Unless the thrill glider was intended for the 2025 season and they pushed it back a year, someone else would have to chime in.
Honestly as a planned approach it's not a terrible one at all, as it will give the park's schedule room to breathe and focus resources on offseason activities. European parks do this, Rapterra did it, some of these big coaster projects there were able to begin commissioning in the fall before opening season, SFGADV could benefit from the same.My gut feeling is we're going to wind up with a similar situation on this one as we saw with Flash...the ride will be complete and operational before the end of the 2026 season, but rather than open it for a few weeks they'll save it to run from opening day the following year.
I’m not sure why the financial angle is being brushed off like it’s some fantasy scenario. When a company posts the kind of numbers Six Flags just did, a $1.2B loss in the first three quarters, a $1.5B impairment, soft per-cap spending, and more than $5B in debt, major capital projects absolutely get delayed. That’s standard corporate behavior.You're acting like Six Flags is the little Monopoly bankrupt logo with a guy in a suit turning out his pockets and shrugging when he realizes he's out of cash. This just isn't how financing huge, many multi-million-dollar projects works. They didn't plan the coaster for '26, suddenly realize they were a couple million short, and were like "oh shucks, guess we are gonna have to try to make enough money again next year!" This isn't RollerCoaster Tycoon.
And lastly, could you just not? It's a completely unnecessarily controversial, abrasive, and for many, offensive term being used for literally no reason at all. At best, it's just trashy and disruptive. At worst, it could be a rules violation.
This is going to be from Mack Rides.Supports don’t give us a great idea of manufacturer
Nah.Finally!
This is going to be from Mack Rides.
LETS GOOO!!!!
Same color as the original Ka supports (the ones not used for the tower)
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.