Originally posted by Brtnboarder495
Yea, but Intamin rides seem to be extremely reliable[;)]. Well for the most part they are actually, minus my sarcasm. Superman has had its down times with killing and severly injuring people, but IMO that was the parks fault. For the restraint issue, to much pressure was applied or the Hydraluic lap bar was malfunctioning. Possibly there was a leak to big which let to much pressure escape. Either way, I would like to know, what would happen if it broke at like the 250 ft. mark? Wouldn't the train roll down the track? Maybe that is why, the train in station two, does not move to station one, until the train clears the lift, in case of a rollback. But if the train had enough momentum wouldnt it roll back through both stations. Unless there are a teeth like structure on the lift, that catches the train, if the cable breaks. Someone explain this further!
1. Superman has only ever killed one person. Wasnt Intamins fault either IMO.
2. Yes, most ALL rollercoasters should have some form of anti-rollback. You thought it wouldnt have rollback teeth on it? [:O]
To better explain the situation at SROS...
SFNE modified a seat belt on every train to accomodate larger riders. This was NOT specified by Intamin because Intamin makes the belts at a certain length for safety reasons.
The park then let a very, very large man suffering from a disorder (cant remember name, but it has to do with muscle control) ride in that seat.
Then, they didnt get the lap bar down as far as it should have. So, seat belt too long + lap bar in incorrect position = accident waiting to happen.
As I see it, Intamins stuff is perfectly safe. They do have tighter restrictions than most coasters (size that is) but if you fit the size description, you will be perfectly ok.
Theres 2 hydraulic cylinders for each lap bar. Getting 1 to fail is incredibly hard, getting 2 is nearly impossible. Even at that, had the mans seat belt been the PROPER length and secured properly, he would still be safe to make it back to the station. Those seat belts are the safest ones Ive ever been in, impossible to "accidentally" unlatch since you need pressure from 2 opposite points to unlatch it. Not one button.