I cant even begin to imagine what possessed the designer to do that.
And yes SFMMHomie...thats what came to mind. Its like someones 4ft segment AHG'd section coming together with someones 40ft section hand built. total WTF. Ive seen bad but yes CKD....that takes the biscuit.
AND it looks like they KNEW that part would be painful (both on persons AND the track) and added a bunch of ties to help support that.
A lot of it was probably fabrication error rather than design. The extra ties could have been added later to help withstand the extra stress of the misshapped track (and could have helped misshape it themselves).
And the ride itself doesn't look too bad....Layout looks pretty fun actually.
Although, I suppose it is quite interesting, I would be quite interested in riding it to see what it actually felt like, but really the banking al around this ride is just ridiculous.
This roller coaster was initially started by Arrow. After the project started, Arrow fell into bankruptcy. The project was then picked up and completed by Vekoma.
So That's probably the main couse of those bad transitions
See, this is where I think Dwaynes info on the history is wrong.
The ride has operated since 1986. Arrow didnt file or fall into bankruptcy till December of 2001. Something like...15 years? Thats quite a gap. If the track sat for 15 years then Id believe it but thats not the case. I dont think thats what happened and if it did, then the reason why isnt for bankruptcy.
Plus, have you seen what Arrow did right before they went bankrupt? Tennessee Tornado, if youve ever been on it, was built in 1999 and is a GREAT example of what they could do. Its GLASS smooth and runs really nice. The drop has a ton of airtime and the loops feature great hangtime. All with VERY good shaping (Heartlining the whole way through, no headbanging ANYWHERE) and great pacing. Rides alittle too short but hey, its still miles and miles better design than what they had done.
Actually, now that I did some really deep searching, it WAS Arrow Huss before their first bankruptcy. It was then that it allowed the core people from Arrow to jump ship and form Arrow Dynamics, headed up by Ron Toomer.
However, this information is just passed on through verbal means as I got them from Shanes Attic over at TPR. There probably wont be any actual records since bankruptcy falls off your record after 10 years. I found (obviously) their last in the Utah records but alas, its been quite a bit longer since the 1985 incident.
So not sure if its fair to blame Arrow considering they went on to design a few gems after that time ;)