kjkjkj Posted June 20, 2009 Posted June 20, 2009 Check out GordonRides to see some of their ride concepts, one of which is an inverted wooden coaster! Sounds like an interesting concept, but I don't really know how fun it would be. And people thought Son of Beast's loop was a bad idea! http://www.gordonrides.com/concepts.html Quote
Skywriter Posted June 20, 2009 Posted June 20, 2009 Alright I thought at first wow it would be fun it would be very possible but as I thought it out a bit more steel inverted can be ruff in some turns and force your head to slam the head rest which don't fell good now think if you did that to SOB or Beast your head is really going to be smashed I'm not saying either is rough but I believe wooden coasters should not be inverted.They have good ideals but the wooden coaster track would have to be as smooth as a steel. Quote
kjkjkj Posted June 20, 2009 Author Posted June 20, 2009 Yeah, I'd imagine there'd be a lot of headbanging. It just doesn't really seem all that logical to me to have an inverted wooden coaster... Quote
Skywriter Posted June 20, 2009 Posted June 20, 2009 I believe that company is a new one with great ideals but very painful ones. Quote
Diamondback96 Posted June 20, 2009 Posted June 20, 2009 Presenting the first major innovation in wooden coaster design since the early 1900’s: Um... have they ever heard of SOB's loop? Quote
Skywriter Posted June 20, 2009 Posted June 20, 2009 Well that's pretty much gone but I believe the early 1990's did produce the tallest wooden coaster which was a major accomplishment. Quote
Hank Posted June 20, 2009 Posted June 20, 2009 Now THAT is thinking outside of the box. They should build a small prototype to see how it would be for the general public. Then, if all is OK, go ahead with a full size model - even if it had to have several lifts along the way. Smooth turns would cut-out the head banging. Make sure the thing has speed or it will just be another blah coaster. And it doesn't have to have loops if it is done right. Quote
Guest rcfreak339 Posted June 20, 2009 Posted June 20, 2009 Wooden coasters are not meant to do this sort of stuff, how about we keep that to the steel rides? Plus wouldn't this be impossible? There is so much weight on the track above that over the years would cause cracks. Quote
Beast1979 Posted June 20, 2009 Posted June 20, 2009 Interesting idea. I see a painful, maintenance nightmare in that ride. Quote
Zorba Posted June 20, 2009 Posted June 20, 2009 Presenting the first major innovation in wooden coaster design since the early 1900’s: Um... have they ever heard of SOB's loop? There was a looping wooden coaster in '20s I believe. Quote
Zorba Posted June 20, 2009 Posted June 20, 2009 Wooden coasters are not meant to do this sort of stuff, how about we keep that to the steel rides? Plus wouldn't this be impossible? There is so much weight on the track above that over the years would cause cracks. Nothing (not violating the laws of physics) is impossible in engineering if given enough time and money. As for the wood developing cracks over time all that matters is that it is designed correctly. All metal fatigues, also, some metals loose more than 50% of there strength over time, steel coasters are massively over designed to avoid fatigue problems. This is why things that can not be massively over designed such as airplanes and jet engines has hard life limit. For example a 737 might have a life limit of 100,000 takeoffs and landings, as soon as it did its 100,000th landing it would be removed from service as scrapped. SOB had cracking problems because it was not designed correctly and the wood 'fatigued.' EDIT: I am not saying it is a good idea, just possible. Quote
HTCO Posted June 20, 2009 Posted June 20, 2009 I would like to see a rendering of a turn. How do they plan on doing that!? Quote
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