The_bup
TS Member
- Favourite Ride
- Professor Burp’s Bubbleworks
If it gets a good lifetime out of it, I reckon it’s worth itIt's probably the hippies insisting we can't use plastic any more, so they've switched to a plant based goo or something.![]()
If it gets a good lifetime out of it, I reckon it’s worth itIt's probably the hippies insisting we can't use plastic any more, so they've switched to a plant based goo or something.![]()
It passed that milestone at the end of last week; we’re now on 2 full weeks!Am I correct in thinking that Hyperia has finally done a full week of operation?
Huzzah!It passed that milestone at the end of last week; we’re now on 2 full weeks!
The trains roll under gravity along the brake run. Theres a mix of fixed and adjustable brake fins (looks to be around 50/50 on the 2nd half of the breakrun) and the adjustable ones appear to drop only once the train ahead has fully cleared the station. With the fins lowered, there is a noticeable increase in speed (compared to how it crawls with the fins raised) but it's still fairly slow because the train is always running over some fixed fins.I did ask in an earlier post - is it gravity or powered. Maybe the brake isn't releasing fully.
Doesn't make a lot of sense. Do they normally replace it every month and now they're replacing it every 2 days?? Maybe the hard braking is an energy recovery system....
I did ask in an earlier post - is it gravity or powered. Maybe the brake isn't releasing fully.
I think they’re doing this to prepare for when it inevitably does get coldNot too unusual in itself. But how on Earth are these needed in July‽ Sounds like a slight design flaw to me.
I don’t think they’re there for July. I think they’re more in place for the extreme ends of the season, when things get colder.Not too unusual in itself. But how on Earth are these needed in July‽ Sounds like a slight design flaw to me.
*Gestures to... the entire UK climate*Not too unusual in itself. But how on Earth are these needed in July‽