Spork24
Mr. Blue Bird on my shoulder
- Joined
- Jan 21, 2014
- Messages
- 948
I rode slinky dog dash for he first time today. I thought it was great. Tame enough for my 3 yo to ride (and love) but exciting enough to make me want to ride again!
That being said, the first half of the ride uses a launch system that accelerates the already moving train. You then proceed on doing hills and turns and whatnot.
The second section you stop and backup before being launched, and then proceed to hit what i call bunny hop hills. Multiple smallish hills right in a row. I observed that unlike many “bunny hop” sections I’ve ridden before the slinky dog hit the speed almost perfect to cruise over the tops at a speed that didn’t cause the negative G-forces to be uncomfortable.
My question is do you guys think they weigh the train prior to the second launch to instantly calculate the right amount of energy to use on the launch to insure a smooth ride? It would make sense and explain the need to stop other than just story.
I haven’t seen this mentioned anywhere but if it has, my apologies.
That being said, the first half of the ride uses a launch system that accelerates the already moving train. You then proceed on doing hills and turns and whatnot.
The second section you stop and backup before being launched, and then proceed to hit what i call bunny hop hills. Multiple smallish hills right in a row. I observed that unlike many “bunny hop” sections I’ve ridden before the slinky dog hit the speed almost perfect to cruise over the tops at a speed that didn’t cause the negative G-forces to be uncomfortable.
My question is do you guys think they weigh the train prior to the second launch to instantly calculate the right amount of energy to use on the launch to insure a smooth ride? It would make sense and explain the need to stop other than just story.
I haven’t seen this mentioned anywhere but if it has, my apologies.