disney-inspired
Disney on the brain 24/7/365!
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- Jan 24, 2008
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- 6,589
Since I'm not worried about wasting a fast pass on it and the test ride seat is available, I'm hoping I'll fit and be able to ride in May.
I spent a lot of time reading all of these threads and stressing about this.
I was just there this past week- I am 5’6, around 270 pounds, large (but squishy belly), really thick thighs, large butt And hips, average calves. I watched all the videos on getting in the seat and followed them- I walked all the way in, stomach smushed against the seat and feet all the way forward before sitting down and used my arms to pull myself forward while sitting up very straight when the restraints were about to close. I was able to fit with no help from the cm. It was such a relief and the ride was the most amazing thing I’ve ever been on. Feel free to ask me questions
Don't be embarrassed. It's no different than someone being to short to ride. It happens and the limitations of the ride are not something you should be embarrassed about.Last trip in 2019 i was unable to ride FOP for the 1st time due to my size. Also couldn't ride a a few things at Universal in 2020. It is embarrassing but that's my fault and not the park's. I'm down 25 lbs and 3 points of bmi since the Universal trip last year so hoping I did enough to get on next week.
I'm not the person you asked, but my calves are 21 inches around, and I fit.may I ask the size of your calves in inches please?
At the end of a long day it is very likely ones legs could swell enough where they didn't fit into the restraints even though they fit in it earlier in the day. No different than a kid being turned away at Space Mountain at the end of the day for not being tall enough.
There are like a million workarounds Disney could have done, like bench seats or theater seats or spots for strap down wheelchairs or something. But nope.Resurrecting an old thread but it's topical - any recent reports on this? Any chance Disney has found some kind of workaround for those of us who are plentiful in the calves? I carry most of my weight from the waist to my calves and I'd really love to try this ride, so I'm hopeful someone would have good news.
That's disappointing. I read somewhere (maybe in this thread?) that the calf restraints don't even really seem necessary as long as the back restraint is engaged, which makes it even more unfortunate. We were going to rope drop FoP on our AK day and I wish I didn't have to burn time trying the test one. It's especially irritating because it's so nebulous what could be the 'kiss of death' for one person versus another, there's no way to even make a pretty sure guess.There are like a million workarounds Disney could have done, like bench seats or theater seats or spots for strap down wheelchairs or something. But nope.
It does look like Tron will have accessible seats in some configurations, which is good news.
It filters out a ton of wheelchair bound people, even ones who could transfer to something like a bench or theater seat. Or heck, just park a wheelchair in front of some glass. Seems like that would be even cheaper to run.I still do agree it's ridiculous that Disney of all places would design a ride (with a long wait) that filters out a double digit percentage of their guests, when the ride movement doesn't exactly necessitate it (to that degree). Should be easy to add a bigger seat or two to each theater?
I didn't even think about that... you're so right.It filters out a ton of wheelchair bound people, even ones who could transfer to something like a bench or theater seat. Or heck, just park a wheelchair in front of some glass. Seems like that would be even cheaper to run.
It's even worse because this ride is so new, and the whole movie is about being disabled.