General Carowinds discussion
By coasterdude89
#7127
I was just looking at some pictures of Stealth, and I realized that Borg looks so much better and is landscaped better. I have never actually riden or seen Borg (haven't been to PC this season yet) but from the pictures, videos, and commercials I have seen, it looks so much more natural looking in its spot. At PGA in the pictures I have seeen, it looks as though they just built it over concrete and the colors (white and red) do nothing to help it. Click <a href='http://www.coastergallery.com/2000T/PGA.html' target='_blank'>here</a> to see pictures of stealth (at coastergallery.com) or click <a href='http://www.rcdb.com/installationgallery583.htm' target='_blank'>here</a> to view pics (at rcdb.com.) I am so glad and proud that Carowinds actually plants grass under coasters and ads some themeing. This helps the coaster intergrate (however you spell that word) into the enviroment instead of sticking out like an eyesore as Stealth did. And it always seems that Carowinds always has better looking colors than at other parks that don't pick out good colors. Now I wouldn't weant to say any names but *cough* PGA's Stealth colors *cough*. Alrighty, I stated my point. Now, what do YOU think about this?
By carowindsfreak13
#7128
I know what you are saying. Stealth looks like a peice of crap.
By Trev32
#7130
^YEah, AND i also heard it was like a peice of crap, hey wait a minute aren't most of Paramount's newer Coasters a peice of crap??(cough*SON OF BEAST *cough)(cough*RRR*cough)
By TheFluffyGun
#7131
I have noticed that Borg looks a lot better than Stealth. I noticed that PC did add to the ride. If you noticed PC Added the Catch nets after the Lift. I must say that I am proud to work at Borg.
By carowindsfreak13
#7134
I wish I was you. Well by the time I go work there which is 15, 16 the should have a hyper, or giga. I'll work there. :lol:
By Carowindsman
#7138
to bad you have to be 18 to run steel roller coasters
By PoP Eye
#7139
for real, how wooden cause i wood like to work on thunder road
User avatar
By Jonathan
#7140
Well, actually, you can't run Hurler unless you are 18 either. That's the problem with having a park in two states: Two sets of laws. South Carolina law requires you to be 16 to operate rides, while North Carolina law requires you to be 18. Top Gun is in South Carolina, but the park requires you to be 18 for that just as a park rule.
By coasterdude89
#7155
Jonathan wrote: Well, actually, you can't run Hurler unless you are 18 either. That's the problem with having a park in two states: Two sets of laws. South Carolina law requires you to be 16 to operate rides, while North Carolina law requires you to be 18. Top Gun is in South Carolina, but the park requires you to be 18 for that just as a park rule.

Sometimes I wish that I lived in SC becuase they're not as many stupid laws. I that law that fireworks are illegal in NC. Who came up with that bull crap. Fireworks are fun as long as your doing it in a safe mannor. The hard part is trying not to get caught! I would love to work at Carowinds next summer, the only problem is that you have to be 16, and I turn 16 in August of that summer. So, I wont be able to work there next year, it'll have to be the next (going in to my senior year!!!)
By Carowindsman
#7160
If you read this you may have to wait a few more years

May. 29th, 2004 -- Officials say that rides have become too powerful to be operated by children. Amusement Park Ride Child Labor Act of 2004 was created to protect young employees and park patrons. This act, if passed, would prohibit anyone under the age of 18 to operate the more powerdriven amusement park rides.

In most states, 16-year-olds are permitted to be behind the controls. Park and industry representatives say training, not age, should be the defining factor of operators. Most parks have a two- to three-day clinic just to learn how to help patrons on and off the ride. As of now, there is no correlation with accident stastics and the age of ride operators.


here is the rest of the article

Age an issue for amusement parks
Bill would keep minors from running power-driven rides
Saturday, May 29, 2004
John Horton
Plain Dealer Reporter

Bainbridge Township- Would you put your life in the hands of a 16-year-old? Most amusement park riders do every day, when they step onto looping, twisting coasters run by teens barely old enough to drive.

And some people are questioning whether that's safe.

A bill recently introduced in Congress would prohibit minors from operating power-driven amusement park rides. The proposal, dubbed the Amusement Park Ride Child Labor Act of 2004, is designed to protect young employees and park patrons, says its sponsor.

Rides have simply grown too fast and powerful to leave in the hands of children, said David Moulton, chief of staff for the bill's author, U.S. Rep. Edward Markey, Democrat of Massachusetts.

"The consequences of a bad decision get greater ever year," Moulton said.

Fourteen states - including Michigan, New York and Pennsylvania - already consider 18 to be the minimum age to operate mechanical rides for adults, according to Saferparks, a California nonprofit corporation and amusement industry watchdog group.

In addition, some individual parks - including Cedar Point in Sandusky and Walt Disney Co. destinations - have policies that restrict minors from running rides.

In Ohio, as with most states, ride operators can take the controls at age 16. Geauga Lake, which straddles the border between Geauga and Portage counties, and Paramount's Kings Island outside Cincinnati both employ minors as ride operators.

Officials at those parks and other industry representatives say training - not age - is the key. Amusement park accident statistics do not show a direct correlation between mishaps and the age of the ride operator.

"You cannot make a judgment call that everyone who's 16 or 17 is irresponsible," said Beth Robertson, a spokeswoman with the International Association of Amusement Parks and Attractions.

"If you're properly trained - and park workers are very well trained - it doesn't matter if you're 16 or 60."

Ride operators and attendants at Geauga Lake learn the attraction top to bottom before pulling a shift, said Andre Ransom, the park's rides manager. Workers go through a two- to three-day training process just to assist passengers getting on the ride. Once they master those tasks, they're eligible to run the controls.

Two 17-year-old employees - Candiss Owens of Bedford and Lisa Page of Cleveland - spent Wednesday afternoon learning how to handle one of Geauga Lake's coasters. Their instructor - Mike Martorella, a ride supervisor at the park - repeatedly buzzed their ears with safety talk.

"Our operators learn how to do it right," Martorella said, "or they don't work the ride."

That promise is enough for riders such as Carole Sanderson, a Geauga County woman who serves as president of the 8,000-member American Coaster Enthusiasts. Sanderson worries more about sunburn than who's running park rides.

Congress, she said, should have bigger concerns than who's helping people have fun.

"The kids are OK," Sanderson said. "Let 'em do their job."
By Trev32
#7163
coasterdude89 wrote:
Sometimes I wish that I lived in SC becuase they're not as many stupid laws. I that law that fireworks are illegal in NC. Who came up with that bull crap.

Lol you should live in King N.C. then I used the illegal ones(the ones like they used at carowinds only smaller) and there wasn't any problems with the police or anything.
By carowindsfreak13
#7177
Need too get back on topic,...