Hello guys I know 2 of the people injured. They're a young couple from Barnsley a guy of 18 and a girl of 19. The guy has lost his little finger (That is the reason for the reports of blood) and both of his knees have popped out of place from what I was told last night he will walk again fortunately. His girlfriend however she has been told she could potentially be paralysed. she had to be airlifted to the nearest spinal injury specialist hospital. Praying to god they're ok.
Sorry, but even if it was a human pushing a button to release that train at the top of the lift hill, that still isn't human error to me. If this is indeed the case, the computerised system itself still failed in that it allowed that unsafe process to override its instincts...
BBC said:Mikko Kiviluoma from PowerPark said: "Our rollercoaster Junker is a brand new model with the latest technology, so as we know it is a different model. Junker was built up during this spring 2015 and tested over 2,000 times before opening. Safety is number one thing in PowerPark and we do normal checks every day for all our rollercoasters and other equipment."
BBC said:David Bromilow, operations manager at Drayton Manor Theme Park, said: "Every ride undergoes a rigorous daily safety inspection by our experienced maintenance team covering all maintenance and testing before we open the park to our guests.
"As well as the daily inspection and testing, all rides are inspected and verified regularly by independent inspectors in compliance with the HSE guidelines for safe operation."
I was literally just thinking about how they should have something directly after the batwing, like they do by the top of the first hill on Rita, on all accelerators etc etc.However it's poor design, a few more sensors on the spot of the valley could eliminate this issue entirely.
I was literally just thinking about how they should have something directly after the batwing, like they do by the top of the first hill on Rita, on all accelerators etc etc.
As the old saying goes: Prevention is better than cure. They should of re-profiled that part of the track so it never happens.
You don't need sensors everywhere. I almost certain he ride detected the problem and shutdown. For some reason and its not up to me to speculate, but the ride reset the blocks and sent the train into an occupied block. Who or what reset that safety feature will be the highlight of the investigation.
There is no certainty that it would as we don't know why/how it happened. The block system clearly worked, but something caused it to stop working. An extra sensor would not change that
An extra sensor would not change that
Sorry double post. Its now believed that one rider has had both legs removed. Once again, not confirmed so its just rumour!
BBC said:Senior paramedic, Peter Howell, said: "The women's injuries were worst, both suffered open wounds and damaged legs; the two men had leg and chest injuries but were less seriously hurt."