Here is a post from Spoony52 at allamericanthrills that got the chance to ride Skyrush for filming.
WooHoo! Had the opportunity to ride Skyrush today (5/23) as part of the Commercial Shoot! There were probably about 60 "extras" called, plus two "families" of professional actors. The pros needed makeup; I guess I did not. The "pros" were only used in the first two rows for all of the rides with the "camera-on-board" and for about half the rides with shooting trackside- I'd estimate for those runs the film crew had about 4 cameras that they moved to various locations around the circuit. After an early arrival(6:30 AM), we were escorted to Looper Famous Famiglia restaurant. I could tell by the gasps that some of the group had never even seen the lift hill before. The film crew completed alignment and testing of the on-board camera and made a few test runs before the first groups of riders boarded about 9 AM. My first ride was on the second trip. OMG! SUPER intense and the airtime/negative Gs have to be experienced to be believed. Words cannot do it justice. They advertise 5 airtime hills, but it's SEVEN, including the lift hill, on which the trains fly (18 MPH) to the top! The winged seats are fabulous, and offer a dramatically different ride than the interior seats. Interestingly, the "ejector" airtime is just about the same no matter where you sit on the train. Front row middle is the smoothest, and rear row wings are downright MEAN- in a great way! Of course, for commercial filming, hands had to stay on the grab bars for the whole ride (safety is #1), but until I ride Saturday and give it a try, I don't know how much I'll be lettin' go anyway. The film crew called it "a wrap" about 12:30; I finished with 11 rides. Many of the participants wimped out after 2 or 3; surprised by that intensity, they were. We also got to see the Memorial Plaque to the late Frank O'Connell that HE&R dedicated with his family the previous night. Without his vision, we would probably NOT have Skyrush to be thankful for this summer. What a class move by Hershey to place that in his memory. DON'T MISS this coaster, surely to be one of the hot rides at any park this summer.
Sorry about the length of this post, but it's all necessary:
On Tuesday, May 15th, I had attended an informational session on ?????????Skyrush: Behind the Scenes????????? presented by Kent Bachman at the Hershey Country Club. Intamin/IntaRide ?????????turned over the keys????????? to HP that day, and Kent was on the first ride with humans! As he told me- ?????????words cannot describe it?????????. He was on a wing seat, and said he was holding on pretty tight!. Some of his more important comments clarified some things we?????????d been wondering about, and he also shared some new info, some of it from the accelerometers and/or Fred the crash test dummy. I took notes and think I have it all correct:
?????????The ?????????advertised????????? ride height of 200????????? is the actual drop; the 212????????? (from the permit) is to the creek floor.
?????????Max g-force = just under 5.0 at bottom of first drop. (smile for the camera)
?????????Max NEGATIVE g-force is -2.0! Now that's some airtime!
?????????Although published stats say 5 airtime hills, the data recorder shows 7, including the rear of the train over the lift hill, just as we suspected.
?????????Max speed has been 76.3 MPH, also at bottom of first drop. This is just outside the planned envelope?????????.he said they MAY (his words) trim it just a shade to 76.0
?????????Ride time start of lift to return: 63 seconds
?????????Each train weighs 16 tons, empty.
?????????I loved this one: 1.5 BILLION scan points were catalogued of all the existing rides, structures, terrain, etc. prior to starting design layouts
?????????Also as suspected, the two mis-painted cross braces on the south tower were just that, a mistake. They will eventually be blue. LOL
?????????300 cubic yards of concrete are at the bottom of the lift hill at the station. That?????????s 48 standard concrete-mixer trucks full.
?????????There will be no light beacon at the top of lift hill because of its proximity to the Kissing Tower.
?????????The mini-pile footers vary in depth from 30????????? to 130?????????; Skyrush has 173 support columns for the track; in comparison, Bear has 196, for a coaster 800????????? shorter. This was mainly possible due to the double-spine truss design of the track and was an important factor in keeping the costs down.
?????????And this surprising one????????? and I specifically asked to make sure I heard correctly: If you are over 6?????????5????????? tall, you will NOT be permitted to ride. There will be a guide stick for the ops that has the minimum 54????????? and the maximum 77?????????. It has nothing to do with arm reach, but rather the average length of the lower leg from knee to (pointed) toes, which I guess due to the train/seat configuration, could catch on something. That?????????ll upset some folks, but not as much as if they had half their foot hacked off.
Mavman