Jason Voorhees
Hyper Poster
Re: Rumoured Dollywood New 2014 Coaster
When I went to the park in May there where a few support pieces out behind it!
When I went to the park in May there where a few support pieces out behind it!
The words of an engineer are pretty irrelevant to everyone who rides a coaster.Snoo said:STC said:They already have a woodie though (yeah I know RMCs aren't really woodies, but the public would perceive it as being similar to Thunderhead).
Topper track is a woodie (Outlaw).
Iron Horse track is not (NTG and Iron Rattler).
That's not just opinion, but straight from the words of the ride creator manufacturer himself.
You don't call the GG woodies steel because they have a steel structure, do you? No. You don't. So why call the Iron Horses wood if they have a wood structure? The track is not made of wood, therefore, it is not a wooden rollercoaster.Joey said:The words of an engineer are pretty irrelevant to everyone who rides a coaster.Snoo said:STC said:They already have a woodie though (yeah I know RMCs aren't really woodies, but the public would perceive it as being similar to Thunderhead).
Topper track is a woodie (Outlaw).
Iron Horse track is not (NTG and Iron Rattler).
That's not just opinion, but straight from the words of the ride creator manufacturer himself.
They are all woodies.
It has nothing to do with build materials and everything to do with perception. It's not black and white and is open to guest interpretation. If something conveys the sense of a wooden coaster, or a steel coaster, then it is one, that's all their is to it. Average guests aren't aware enough to know if any of these rides "ride like a steel/wood". It's about how they look and thematically what they stand for. Wood is a very strong, specific theme conveyor, suggesting age, nostalgia and classicness. Those things are more fundamentally important to the people who matter, guests, than any technical jargon.BBH said:You don't call the GG woodies steel because they have a steel structure, do you? No. You don't. So why call the Iron Horses wood if they have a wood structure? The track is not made of wood, therefore, it is not a wooden rollercoaster.
Mine trains =/= wooden
Iron horse =/= wooden
Exactly! When riding the new Gravit Group at Gröna Lund my friends had all funny comments rangeing from complaints that it's not a classic woodie due to it's supports to someone actually thinking it was a steel coaster just disguised as a wooden one! The genreal public wont notice the thickness of the steel layer on the track (what manufacturers/enthusiasts use to classify the ride) but they most certainly will notice whether the entire support structure is made out of wood or steel!Joey said:It has nothing to do with build materials and everything to do with perception. It's not black and white and is open to guest interpretation. If something conveys the sense of a wooden coaster, or a steel coaster, then it is one, that's all their is to it. Average guests aren't aware enough to know if any of these rides "ride like a steel/wood". It's about how they look and thematically what they stand for. Wood is a very strong, specific theme conveyor, suggesting age, nostalgia and classicness. Those things are more fundamentally important to the people who matter, guests, than any technical jargon.BBH said:You don't call the GG woodies steel because they have a steel structure, do you? No. You don't. So why call the Iron Horses wood if they have a wood structure? The track is not made of wood, therefore, it is not a wooden rollercoaster.
Mine trains =/= wooden
Iron horse =/= wooden
andrus said:^Yes, but I've wondered many times why we haven't seen another S&S family launch coaster? Everybody that have been on Poweder Keg seems to agree that it's a good coaster, amazing even for a family one! But yet there hasn't been a follow up. That's strange to me...
That would be amazing. But unlikely...I defiantly want to see that concept in the future though.michaellll said:So... launched RMC anyone? Dreamin' big over here.