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  • #16
    as a father of a 8 month old and a 27 month old i am disgusted at that woman

    That would have killed the child more than likely, whilst the soft bones and tissue can take some knocks (small falls etc when toddling) large or sustained shocks can seriously injure and even kill small children.

    The most likely effect would be neck injury as teh head is teh heavyest part of a child that small and the strain on the neck is already quite alot in a sense...so if under a few g's it is likely to fail to support the head and when that happens there will be nothing to fall back on as the whole ride experience is under 3g's or whatever it is so sustained force....soft bones....heavy weight

    NOT GOOD
    We are the willing, led by the unknowing, doing the impossible, for the ungrateful, we have now done so much, for so long - for so many, with so little, we can now do anything with nothing!!!

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    • #17
      concider the pressure the centrifical force puts on even me (i have a hard time breathing on that thing, due to the pressure it exerts on my chest) why would you even think about, i sure that baby would be severly injured

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      • #18
        The kind of ride that you described was called "The Rotor" at Hersheypark. They tore it down a long time ago. It would be like a round house that you went inside & stood against the walls. It would start spinning and as it did you would stick to the walls by centrifigal force. Then after a few seconds the floor would drop down.
        Many times after the ride was over that somebody would stumble out of it puking their guts out. It used to be my favorite ride.

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        • #19
          It is (or was) the Rotor at The Great Escape park in Upstate NY, too. I never went on that version of it either. The diagram the OP drew, though, more accurately depicts the Gravitron at the county fair.

          Local grade school rumor about the Rotor was that some kid puked while riding it, but couldn't turn their head and ended up suffocating on the stuff. Ick.
          "Enough expository banter. It's time we fight like men. And ladies. And ladies who dress like men. For Gilgamesh...IT'S MORPHING TIME!"
          - Gilgamesh, Final Fantasy V

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          • #20
            Quoth Bright_Star View Post
            The kind of ride that you described was called "The Rotor" at Hersheypark.
            Actually the Gravitron and the Rotor (and similar) are two different rides.

            The Gravitron has sloped sides with sliding palets that you lean against. When the operator makes it go faster, the pallets slide up and bump against the ceiling stop. Then the operator slows it down till all of the pallets slip back down. I have fun on those, but they were more fun when I was lighter. I could do weird positions and I'd stay against the pallet better.

            The Rotor style rides are primarily a large cylinder with a door in the upper portion and another in the lower portion. Riders stand around the outside of the barrel and the entire room starts rotating. When it gets fast enough, the operator drops the floor out, leaving the riders plastered to the wall. Eventually, the ride ends, and it slows to a stop, allowing the riders to slide down to the floor at varying speeds depending on their mass, where they exit through the second door once the ride has fully stopped. The floor is brought back up to the upper part of the ride to reset it for the next group.

            I'm actually a much bigger fan of Rotors than Gravitrons.

            ^-.-^
            Faith is about what you do. It's about aspiring to be better and nobler and kinder than you are. It's about making sacrifices for the good of others. - Dresden

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            • #21
              Quoth IT Grunt View Post
              Same here! Kennywood had a similar ride called the Rotor. The floor dropped down, leaving you hanging in mid air as it spun around. YEEEEHAH!
              One of the great sadnesses of my life is that, by the time I was tall enough to actually ride the Rotor, it was gone. And it should be noted - the biggest reason they didn't let little kids on the Rotor was that they didn't have the mass to stick to the sides. When one did manage to sneak on, they'd slowly slide about three feet downwards....so imagine what would happen to a one year old on a spinning ride!

              On the other hand, Kennywood now has the Exterminator. Any rollercoaster that mostly takes place in the dark is a good roller coaster.

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              • #22
                Quoth Metody View Post
                On the other hand, Kennywood now has the Exterminator. Any rollercoaster that mostly takes place in the dark is a good roller coaster.
                Except for epileptics. RF X:No Way Out at Thorpe Park in England.

                Been on Rotor once, at a Steam Fair many years ago. Can't remember whether I enjoyed it or not.

                The only ride that has ever made me physically ill was Pendulous at Pleasure Island, also in England. It was a spinning circular gondola as I'm sure some of you may have seen, only this one sped up during the last few swings, and I'm sure the fact that one's legs were actually on a floor instead of dangling in space had something to do with it... *urp*
                "...Muhuh? *blink-blink* >_O *roll over* ZZZzzz......"

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                • #23
                  Ooh the Gravitron was my favoritest ride ever! I've never had the motion sickness problem, luckily for me. I remember it having TV monitors suspended from the ceiling of it, and speakers would blast some kind of loud music, too. Possibly with strobe lights, though...it's been a long time and I could be confusing that with something else.

                  I really shudder to think what would happen to a baby in there, though. Certain people should not be allowed to reproduce.

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                  • #24
                    I quit going on anything riskier than the Tilt O Whirl after the incident in 2001....

                    What incident is that?

                    There is a small fair every summer in my hometown further north in Wi. I went on the Zipper. There was a power surge/outage/whatever. I was stuck upside down with my back kinked for 45 minutes.

                    So anything worse than the Tilt O Whirl is a big no no for me.
                    You really need to see a neurologist. - Wagegoth

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                    • #25
                      Quoth blas87 View Post
                      I went on the Zipper. There was a power surge/outage/whatever. I was stuck upside down with my back kinked for 45 minutes.
                      you got stuck on the Zipper?!? I'm always afraid that I will whenever I ride that death trap ride......... but I still love it, no clue why.
                      "...WHY DO YOU TEMPT WHAT LITTLE FAITH IN HUMANITY I HAVE!?!" ~ Kalga

                      "DO NOT ENRAGE THE MIGHTY SKY DRAGON." ~ Gravekeeper

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                      • #26
                        I think what happened was the typical too many plugs in the plug-in. It was the middle of the day, so obviously it didn't get dark, but EVERY ride froze up (this was a small fair, less than 15 rides) and everything that ran on electricity died for that amount of time. I felt especially sorry for the people riding the Bullet, they were stuck sideways, upside down, or facing straight down for 45 minutes.

                        The Zipper was always one of my favorite rides, but never again.

                        I was there with some friends. A lot of us were screaming because we didn't realize it was an outage right away, and we were certain the ride had jammed and soon we were going to plummet to our deaths. It was horrifying.....I remember all the carnies scurrying around and all the parents freaking out.

                        That's your Final Destination moment of the day.
                        You really need to see a neurologist. - Wagegoth

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                        • #27
                          I used to LOVE the Rotorer (sp) at Kings Island. They closed it years ago, unfortunately.

                          Taking a kid on there?

                          OT, the ONLY ride that makes me sick to this day is that damned Viking ship that swings back and forth slowly. On two seperate occasions I was dragged on there by some friends, despite my protests that I'd get ill. Both times I threw up afterward. I made sure to aim DIRECTLY at their shoes both times.
                          "So, if you wanna put places like that outta business, just stop being so rock-chewingly stupid." ~ Raudf, 9/19/13

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                          • #28
                            oh the starship...at my county fair at the time they called it Gravitron. I never felt so dizzy in my life after going on that ride. That lady needs a serious whack on her head to think that a little baby could go on a ride like that!
                            I don't get paid enough to kiss your a**! -Groezig 5/31/08
                            Another day...another million braincells lost...-Sarlon 6/16/08
                            Chivalry is not dead. It's just direly underappreciated. -Samaliel 9/15/09

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                            • #29
                              Back about 1978 I spent 2 weeks with a carnival (a friend actually worked and traveled with them). To this day, I will NOT get on any rides at a traveling carnival. They just are not safe IMHO. I would probably still do rides at someplace permanent like Six Flags, though. They get put through a LOT more inspections.

                              BTW, working a carnival is far from glamorous. Wages are extremely low, expenses are quite high, and the work is very hard and dirty. Those two weeks really opened my eyes!
                              Everything will be ok in the end. If it's not ok, it's not the end.

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                              • #30
                                I am a self-proclaimed roller coaster junkie, I absolutely love them.

                                But you couldn't drag me onto a salt-and-pepper ride or one of those one that just takes you up and drops you repeatedly if my life depended on it. It's not that they scare me, but for some reason, that makes me so queasy just thinking about it.

                                I amazed me how many people would argue with me at the coaster I worked at to let their kids ride. We had a height requirement, and were very strict about it, because we were floorless. A kid that wasn't tall enough probably didn't have that big of a torso, and was at risk of slipping out of the restraints :shudder: . Just because the other ride with the same height restriction would let them ride (the one that *had* a floor). I constantly told parents (and did not get in trouble, because my sup agreed with me) that because *they* didn't care about their child's safety, that I would, and refuse to let them ride.

                                I rode the roller coasters I worked at at a certain major theme park nearly every day, and still love it. There's one that you hang for 7 seconds before it drops you straight down. *That* I love!

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