Enter Valhalla
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Park entrance/ wristbands isn’t included in the cost of a stay at Big Blue though is it? It never was on any of the times I stayed at BB anyway.
Not in the basic rate, but according to the website, you can get a more expensive rate that includes park admission. For 1 night, though, it was around £120 when 1 day BPB admission was thrown in, so on a per day basis, it would work out cheaper for me to buy my wristband(s) separately.Park entrance/ wristbands isn’t included in the cost of a stay at Big Blue though is it? It never was on any of the times I stayed at BB anyway.
I’d probably say completely separate really. The quality of accommodation in Blackpool has been (slowly) improving over the years with places like Hampton by Hilton opening nearby along with the Travelodge and Premier Inn too. Whilst they’re lower quality in many people’s eyes, they’re still competition as people trust the brands and know what they’re getting. Big Blue by comparison is an older hotel. They’re likely dropping the price as they’d sooner see a hotel with higher occupancy over charging a fortune and only having it 20-30% full on weekdays.Could the drop in hotel prices be why the park has raised entry prices so much? So the rise in park entry is offset by a decline in hotel prices?
That could be a lucrative business model in a place like Blackpool, to be fair; I can imagine there’s a lot of demand for accommodation from Blackpool holidaymakers who might not necessarily want a theme park visit.
They’re banking on illuminations traffic basically, and with the shorter hours charging a premium for it too. They’d be far better with a cheaper model or free entry/sensible pay per ride option in my view for such short opening hours.Apologies if this has already been discussed (this thread is always so busy that I find it hard to keep up with it), but has anyone noticed that in September, the park is closed in the daytime on Fridays, but open 4pm-9pm?
Whilst I think that opening in the evenings on Fridays as opposed to the daytime is probably a better move commercially, they’re charging the same price as they charge on an 11-5 or many of the 10-5 days, which I think isn’t great since it’s at least an hour shorter, but for the same price.
Hotels generally, I booked for 5 different cities (inc. London & Edinburgh) and it all seemed pretty reasonable with the premium brands / locations within our corporate budget which you typically wouldn't see in peak tourist season.Are you talking about hotels in general @Rick? Or are you looking at a particular market (e.g. UK hotels, abroad hotels)?
Out of interest how busy do Hot Ice shows actually get? Do they actually run in much of a profit for pleasure beach?Oh well, there's no need to worry, it's only a week till the hot ice show opens!! I am sure that will rake in millions !!
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That would suggest they have done away with the second turntable as there would be no need for it if you are already going forwards.Valhalla has been testing again today, some eagle-eyed visitors have been filming the front of the ride which clearly shows the first turntable has been changed. The boat now rotates in the opposite direction and leaves facing forwards:
Doesn't Chiapas at Phantasialand have two different mechanisms to switch the boats? One is a turn table and one is a sliding transfer track if I remember correctly.I wonder if they could have moved the second turntable to where the first was. The first was always the problematic one. I imagine the second one was more "adaptable".
So strange that Intamin used two completely different mechanisms to do the same thing 30ft from each other.
They are two different mechanisms, T1 is submerged in the trough and is primarily pneumatic. The boats are brought in using the kickers in the previous block and the arms on the side of the turntable position it and provide the motion, so to speak.I would not say they were two different mechanisms, just two turntables with a different level of turn on each one, to suit the layout.