Laura said:No, I am a very wrong person.
The point I was trying to make is, OTSRs give an illusion of safety and security when their use isn't entirely necessary (just like the 'safety' belts). And I know that some people are very outspoken about the whole restraint thing, and it'll probably seem pathetic that someone who should know better still feels uncomfortable looking at rides like Karacho. If it's hard for an enthusiast to overcome, I don't think you'd ever convince the British public.
Cheese said:In the 90s Towers dared guests to face whatever the latest in thrill hardware could throw at them; a real shame that the park no longer seems willing to push the limits in this way.
Ian said:See for me personally, it's the fear of what might happen which makes coasters so appealing in many respects. The Smiler with lapbars would add a whole new sense of thrill and fear to it. It's one of my few complaints with a lot of rides which use OTSRs, which is that parks/manufacturers have a habit of over-engineering them, which takes a lot of the thrill out of the experience by making the rider feel too safe.
But that's a good thing, it means a shorter queue.Amy said:I do think though, that lapbars might put quite a lot of people off riding The Smiler,
djtruefitt said:I wasn't really talking about the logos, more about the design of the front. The logos may have just been removed for general maintenance and will return.