I really wonder what the Zamperla sales agent told Cedar Point for them to trust a deep refurbishment of one of the world's largest thrill coasters to one of the most dismal coaster manufacturers in the business, who have no experience with coasters bigger than mid-size Eurofighters (of which they have delivered five in total).
Or alternately, I'd like to know what the sales agent put in their coffee before the meeting started.
This remains the biggest thematic convos seem to turn back to; how
exactly did Zamperla get the gig?
I still posit the false choice that others have argued on "why not trust Intamin, again?" as Intamin too, frankly, has shown an abysmal record of reliability. Not to rehash our slow burn convo on the topic, but the irony remains that CP's two most recent coaster removals are large, multi-million Intamins (TTD and Wicked Twister).
Maybe the core tenet we face throughout this is the fleeting pursuit of perfection. At what cost do we try to build the tallest, fastest, most exciting roller coasters? While we'd like to think there isn't a trade off of excitement and reliability/longevity - TTD and Kingda Ka (still down at present able a cable snap) show limits to the theory, or atleast the immense cost of maintenance and upkeep.
The magnetic LSM launch will not be as thrilling as the hydraulic launch, full stop (unfortunately magnets can't beat the acceleration and "kick" of hydraulic or pneumatic launches); but it will mean TTD lives to see another day with (hopefully) more operational hours packed in.
Even godlike roller coasters prove to be mortal at the end of the day.
On the other hand remember when vekoma pitched for Hyperion and everyone said much the same? Think we can all agree now the modern Vekoma hyper coaster would have been quite something with their new track and Benjamin's designs.
Still it does seem like a risk of quite mammoth proportions. Fingers crossed it works out.
Cedar Fair has shown a flair for the "let's try it" occasionally. Let's not forget the multiple 300 ft. Mondial Windseekers that were purchased (to... ahem... relative success).