herman116 wrote:
rcdude wrote:
The park was able to get the train down by putting the coaster into manual mode and launching the catch car to shake the top hat, eventually causing the train to roll over and complete the circuit.
Isn't it extremely risky to put the coaster in manual mode while the train is still full of people? That was what went wrong with the Smiler wasn't it?
There is a risk to putting a coaster in manual mode, but the risk is the increased possibility of operator error. In manual mode, the operator is essentially enabling the ability to override the safety protocols of the operating system and is given the ability to control each individual component independently. If the person at the controls knows what they're doing, there won't be a problem. For example, I've been on several roller coasters (usually older and often of the traveling variety) that were 100% manually operated and ran 2-3 vehicles with no problems. This is done by visually monitoring exactly where each train is at any given time and only allowing a train to advance if the track is clear (essentially a human powered block system). What happened on Smiler is that the operator assumed the track was clear without visually verifying that it was indeed clear, so they overrode a warning and advanced a train into an occupied block.
In any case, the risk in the Xcelerator incident was negligible for the following reasons:
1. As stated previously, the incident occurred during morning testing before the park opened for the day. At that time, the train was unloaded. Had the train been loaded, the extra momentum would have likely prevented it from getting stuck.
2. Even if the stuck train was loaded, Xcelerator only operates with one train. While the ride does have two trains and the capacity increase is about 70% with both trains in operation, the downtime increases by about 150% so the capacity increase is mostly cancelled. The park is currently looking into reprogramming the ride in order to minimize additional downtime with two train operation, but until that happens they have decided to only use one train.
3. Even if two trains were on the track, the blocking setup would ensure that they are isolated from each other. Due to the ride launching directly out of the station, the second train is unable to advance into it until the first train reaches the bottom of the drop. There is also a block section before the waiting block, so a train cannot be launched until the other train has entered this block. Therefore, regardless of which side the train came down it would be stopped in a block section before reaching the other train (unless the operator disabled the brakes, but that would require extreme incompetence and/or malicious intent).
Because of the nature of manual mode, there is certainly a greater risk potential, and this is the reason parks have very strict regulations regarding it. However, if proper procedures are followed and the operator doesn't do something stupid there won't be any problems.