USAToday published a short article by Tim O'Brien, editor of Amusement Business, that describes the ride from his perspective during a recent media preview. It's also interesting to note that Tim was told that Disney might have MS up and running ahead of the announced 8/15 public preview. Here are some exerpts from the article:
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"It's an amazing experience and an even more amazing ride system," says Tim O'Brien, an editor at Amusement Business magazine who rode it during testing. The ride officially opens Aug. 15, but Disney officials say it could be running on-and-off earlier.
After a "prelaunch briefing," riders climb into four-person capsules that tilt backward before takeoff so riders are lying on their backs. Monitors let riders see "outside."
O'Brien says the sense of realism is surprisingly strong. "Blastoff rumbles the capsule, (and) you sense you are going up. ... You see the smoke come up and around the capsule, and you feel an amazing amount of G-force. My cheeks started flapping because there was so much force."
After blastoff, riders feel the "booster rockets" drop off as the capsule reaches space. "You get this wonderful sense of weightlessness," O'Brien says. "You then feel a combination of G-forces as you are slung around the moon on your way to Mars."
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I'm very excited, to say the least.
Luis
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"It's an amazing experience and an even more amazing ride system," says Tim O'Brien, an editor at Amusement Business magazine who rode it during testing. The ride officially opens Aug. 15, but Disney officials say it could be running on-and-off earlier.
After a "prelaunch briefing," riders climb into four-person capsules that tilt backward before takeoff so riders are lying on their backs. Monitors let riders see "outside."
O'Brien says the sense of realism is surprisingly strong. "Blastoff rumbles the capsule, (and) you sense you are going up. ... You see the smoke come up and around the capsule, and you feel an amazing amount of G-force. My cheeks started flapping because there was so much force."
After blastoff, riders feel the "booster rockets" drop off as the capsule reaches space. "You get this wonderful sense of weightlessness," O'Brien says. "You then feel a combination of G-forces as you are slung around the moon on your way to Mars."
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I'm very excited, to say the least.
Luis