All I can say is OMG. How is this even possible? We couldn't even keep our Giant Top spin together by just spinning it.
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Has anyone seen this before?
Started by Brian5475E, May 05 2012 12:34 PM
#1
Posted 05 May 2012 - 12:34 PM
- DIeseltech20 likes this
#2
Posted 05 May 2012 - 12:39 PM
#3
Posted 05 May 2012 - 12:39 PM
Yes. It's been posted here before. Only one Huss Giant Top Spin was ever installed in a park. We know how that ended. Different ride. Different forces.
#4
Posted 05 May 2012 - 01:42 PM
Plus, I'm pretty sure this is the Mondial or Zamperla equivalent. HUSS's top spins do not move the arms independently of one another. Well, not intentionally, anyway. The model in the video is designed to move this way, as is apparent from the dampers in the center of each arm and the way each arm bends inward at the center when the arms aren't moving the same way.
Based on my experience on a Zamperla Rotoshake, a vaguely similar model, I don't imagine the ride pictured would be very comfortable. Then again, I've never ridden it, so who knows?
Based on my experience on a Zamperla Rotoshake, a vaguely similar model, I don't imagine the ride pictured would be very comfortable. Then again, I've never ridden it, so who knows?
#5
Posted 05 May 2012 - 01:47 PM
And yet the Giant Top Spin is still listed on Huss' website.
What's strange is why Paramount/CBS/Viacom (whoever owned the park at the time the decision was made) would choose an unproven concept model over a reliable and well-proven actual model when the capacity of the giant model really isn't that much better than that of the standard model.
Capacities for both, from Huss' website (which of course means they're nowhere near realistic):
Giant - 900 people per hour
Regular - 855 people per hour
In a perfect world where you actually hit the stated capacity, that's only an extra 540 people per 12-hour operating day.
What's strange is why Paramount/CBS/Viacom (whoever owned the park at the time the decision was made) would choose an unproven concept model over a reliable and well-proven actual model when the capacity of the giant model really isn't that much better than that of the standard model.
Capacities for both, from Huss' website (which of course means they're nowhere near realistic):
Giant - 900 people per hour
Regular - 855 people per hour
In a perfect world where you actually hit the stated capacity, that's only an extra 540 people per 12-hour operating day.
#6
Posted 05 May 2012 - 01:55 PM
I don't know that I'd accuse the regular top spin models of being reliable, but do also keep in mind that the giant top spin statistics were once higher on HUSS's website. Once upon the time when Paramount was interested in buying one, the model was capable of carrying 77 riders at once, which would have increased the PPH significantly. The standard people capacity lessened with the ride's modification for 2008, and now it hardly carries (carried) more than the average model.
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