lovewdwdvc
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 18, 2004
- Messages
- 1,249
I don't understand the complaints. Roller coasters have generally been less accommodating to overweight guests, due to safety requirements, not because Disney is trying to exclude a segment of their guests. Safety will always trump hurt feelings.
Dang. I'm of average height and weight but I have claustrophobia issues. I'm okay with most DW rides (not all) but if I feel too confined, have no leg room and have a bar between my legs.....I don't think I can ride it.![]()
That picture from Josh's twitter looks, uh, tight. I have to say I'm really surprised at Disney.
I thought they were going to be like the restraints on Seuss's Trolley Ride at UOR from the descriptions..From the pictures, they seem almost the same except on the Seuss ride there is only one bar at your legs, not two (on the outer side of the car). Here's a picture from the Orlando Sentinel (Red Huber)..You can see how they work to let an adult and child both ride and be safe, yet don't restrict as tightly...
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You aren't going to fall out of big thunder. Or really any of the rides. You'd have to try to fall out on purpose.
It really irks me when people post on a discussion thread like this to body shame or to make commenters somehow feel their concerns are not valid.
I think I speak for most people on this thread that one reason why I choose Disney is they are the most accommodating parks in the world. And I'm paying a premium for it. I've been to Disneyland and DisneyWorld many times. I have never been turned away from a ride and I am 5'10 and 400 pounds. Admittingly I have never tried ridding the off-the-shelf rides at each resort like Barnstormer, Go Gadget coaster, Goofy's coaster at DCA, Silly Symphony Swings and the Bugs Land rides. Mainly out of no interest. But I am shocked that I will probably be denied a ride on a 100m+, years in the making family ride (and I fit into the old Snow White ride just fine). Most rides not designed to accommodate larger people are super thrill rides that require strict safety concerns. Disney has already proved they can make accommodating thrill rides like California Screamin', RNR Coaster, Everest, TOT, etc.
There is no excuse for such a strict seating restraints on this coaster. Like was mentioned, an EASY fix is to have a few rows with one lap bar like Big Thunder. As a heavy person, I would rather have that option than no ride at all and Disney can easily mention these rows for guests who need more room. Judging by Josh's pic on Twitter, 2 average size adults would be able to use that row too. With the length of time to build and the lukewarm responses, Disney does not need this backlash.
It will be interesting to see if Universal learned from their mistake and make the new Gringott's ride more accessible/roomy for larger guests. THAT would really sting Disney. I go down Saturday and hoping Gringotts has a soft opening before june 11th.
Dang. I'm of average height and weight but I have claustrophobia issues. I'm okay with most DW rides (not all) but if I feel too confined, have no leg room and have a bar between my legs.....I don't think I can ride it.![]()
It really irks me when people post on a discussion thread like this to body shame or to make commenters somehow feel their concerns are not valid.
I think I speak for most people on this thread that one reason why I choose Disney is they are the most accommodating parks in the world. And I'm paying a premium for it. I've been to Disneyland and DisneyWorld many times. I have never been turned away from a ride and I am 5'10 and 400 pounds. Admittingly I have never tried ridding the off-the-shelf rides at each resort like Barnstormer, Go Gadget coaster, Goofy's coaster at DCA, Silly Symphony Swings and the Bugs Land rides. Mainly out of no interest. But I am shocked that I will probably be denied a ride on a 100m+, years in the making family ride (and I fit into the old Snow White ride just fine). Most rides not designed to accommodate larger people are super thrill rides that require strict safety concerns. Disney has already proved they can make accommodating thrill rides like California Screamin', RNR Coaster, Everest, TOT, etc.
There is no excuse for such a strict seating restraints on this coaster. Like was mentioned, an EASY fix is to have a few rows with one lap bar like Big Thunder. As a heavy person, I would rather have that option than no ride at all and Disney can easily mention these rows for guests who need more room. Judging by Josh's pic on Twitter, 2 average size adults would be able to use that row too. With the length of time to build and the lukewarm responses, Disney does not need this backlash.
It will be interesting to see if Universal learned from their mistake and make the new Gringott's ride more accessible/roomy for larger guests. THAT would really sting Disney. I go down Saturday and hoping Gringotts has a soft opening before june 11th.
the space.between the bars.of.the lap bar is 13.5". Less than I.thought.
the space.between the bars.of.the lap bar is 13.5". Less than I.thought.
That is not much space. I am about 99% positive my husband will not be able to squeeze his legs in a space barely over 1ft. I just got out a tape measurer and mine (above the knee but below thighs...am I measuring the right spot?) is 13". I am about to dump my FP+ for this.
the space.between the bars.of.the lap bar is 13.5". Less than I.thought.
That is not much space. I am about 99% positive my husband will not be able to squeeze his legs in a space barely over 1ft. I just got out a tape measurer and mine (above the knee but below thighs...am I measuring the right spot?) is 13". I am about to dump my FP+ for this.