I would think they need to do more than just put the support back together, or put up an identical one. Something is apparently wrong with the transfer of forces here, which means the geometry of the whole thing might need to be redesigned. Worst case scenario, they have to tear up the whole support from the footer up and make a new one. Best case, the flaw can easily be compensated by making a replacement segment of the support that's a few centimeters longer or shorter.
Is the problem not maybe that the support in question isn't flexing as it should?
I don't know anything, but I remember when Silver Bullet had (still has??) those weird braces for a crack on the box section, I read a structural engineer suggest the cause is likley "too many" supports not allowing that section to flex as it turned out needing to. I mean they were just spitballing too, but that makes sense to me.
I feel like this instinctively looks like the opposite issue - that Fury doesn't have enough supports there to distribute the stress? Or that this support is not distributing stress correctly?
It makes me wonder if they'll put braces on this in the meantime to keep it open - I guess it depends how valuable Fury is to the park? And also whether it's even possible with it moving so much?
I am worried they'll castrate Fury with trims. I can't share much detail, but I once spoke to someone involved in a later B&M, who said the company were resistant to intentionally trying to design a ride like that again. I think we all assume the designers and engineers know how they're gonna turn out 100%, but clearly there's some discrepancies or you wouldn't get Intimidator 305, or Maverick's inversions, etc. I guess the real issue is translating the numbers to the human experience? But this support proves it's about numbers, too.
I'm glad to see here on CF people aren't blaming Carowinds inspections really - I cannot believe how many people think full track and support inspections happen frequently. That's annual, at best, unless the ride has known issues or a catwalk. Going forward I'm sure Fury will get more frequent assessment with binoculars.
Everyone was clearly perfectly safe and cracks aren't unheard of - I actually wonder if they even knew about it (as in when it was just a crack and not completely severed) and deemed it safe till end of season? I literally don't know what I'm on about other than that you could remove that entire support and the ride be perfectly safe for a lengthy period of time. These rides are built so that when they fail, it's safe. Multiple - near impossible numbers - of failures have to happen together for them to be unsafe. The issue here is the PR nightmare cuz it looks so fun and dramatic. And it doesn't help it being so soon after the fatality at Grunalund.
Oh! And it's so unfair that people are posting the old photos of the track as if the photographer noticed them at the time. Hindsight is a wonderful thing. Expecting other people to be super human is ridiculous.