Wild West Falls Adventure Ride

Wild West Falls Adventure Ride (formerly Wild Wild West) is an 8-seater flume ride at Warner Bros. Movie World on the Gold Coast, Australia. The ride features geysers, mine shafts, a ghost town and an inevitable drop as the climax of the ride. The drop is the largest of its kind in Australia.[2] The ride has since been replicated at Parque Warner Madrid as the Rio Bravo, which opened in 2002. But uses boats that were originally used on Valhalla at Englands Blackpool Pleasure Beach [3]

Wild West Falls Adventure Ride
The final splashdown and station of Wild West Falls
Warner Bros. Movie World
Coordinates27°54′32.44″S 153°18′35.45″E
StatusOperating
CostA$18,000,000
Opening date26 December 1998 (1998-12-26)[1]
Parque Warner Madrid
NameRio Bravo
StatusOperating
Opening date6 April 2002 (2002-04-06)
General statistics
TypeLog flume
ManufacturerHopkins Rides
DesignerWarner Bros. Movie World
ModelSuper Flume
CourseCustom
Lift system2 conveyor belt lift hills
Height35 m (115 ft)
Drop20 m (66 ft)
Speed70 km/h (43 mph)
Capacity1440 riders per hour
Duration6 minutes[1]
Height restriction95 cm (3 ft 1 in)
Must transfer from wheelchair

History

Wild West Falls Adventure Ride was originally scheduled to be named Rio Bravo and themed after the film of the same name.[4] The ride's name was then changed to Wild Wild West after the film of the same name starring Will Smith and Kevin Kline.[5] The mountain peak was destroyed before being placed in position in an accident prior to opening.[5]

The ride officially opened to the public on 26 December 1998.[1]

Wild Wild West had its name changed to Wild West Falls Adventure Ride in 2001 due to a licensing dispute. Despite this, a video shown in the queue for the ride depicting scenes from various classic Warner Bros. westerns as well as Wild Wild West's trailer and music video, remains in use.

The ride was closed in December 2003 when an after hours fire caused significant damage to the top of the ride.[6] After repairs and modifications, it was reopened a few weeks later.[7]

In 2002, a similar ride called the Rio Bravo (named after the film) opened at Parque Warner Madrid (then known as Warner Bros. Movie World Madrid). It was manufactured by Intamin.

Summary

The long path towards Wild West Falls is marked by an entrance sign.
The final drop of the Wild West Falls Adventure Ride.

Queue

Riders enter a queue next to the Rio Bravo merchandise shop. The indoor queue weaves around a series of wild-west-themed items. During peak periods, an undercover queue can be opened which is located south of the normal queue. With or without the extended queue, riders then pass through an unused pre-show room before arriving at the ride station.

Station

Throughout the load and unload station riders must mount and dismount the boat while it is moving at a slow speed along a conveyor belt. The conveyor belt can be stopped for those who need assistance in boarding. Guests are loaded into one of several 8-person boats which seat pairs of riders across 4 rows.

Ride

The first section of the ride is slow water channel the weaves its way towards the first lift hill. At the top of the lift hill riders are slowly rotated on a turntable. The 2 bandits shoot the machine until a surprise backwards drop takes riders into a faster section of whitewater rapids. This heavily themed section includes an Indian settlement, a wild-west ghost town and a graveyard, before taking guests into the Rio Bravo mine.[8][9] The boat ascends the second lift hill to the top of the mine. A distressed miner warns the riders to escape before the mine explodes. A second turntable rotates riders to face the final drop. As the doors open the raft is slowly pushed out of the mine and down the drop.[8] Riders can reach speeds of up to 70 kilometres per hour (43 mph) as they descend the 20-metre (66 ft) drop.[1] An on-ride photo is taken of the riders near the top of the final drop.[8] A turn to the left takes the riders into the unloading station. Riders exit via the Rio Bravo shop where ride photos are displayed.

gollark: Yes. It might not be possible to do anything but somehow optimize the genetic-algorithm-based approach then.
gollark: That sounds worrying.
gollark: If your problem actually is nice and differentiable - which it sounds like it *might* be, I think you're laying out cables or something? - then it should be a lot faster if you can use that instead of just moving around randomly.
gollark: "Borrow" a cutting-edge silicon fab and make your design on 5nm, for maximum good.
gollark: Again, computers are fast, so it can probably be optimized.

References

  1. Herde, Chris (2 January 1999). "Action themes aplenty". Advertiser, The (Adelaide, Australia) (2 - Metro ed.). pp. A34.
  2. "Wild West Falls (Warner Bros. Movie World)". Parkz. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
  3. Coaster Kingdom. "Rio Bravo, Movie World Madrid". Coaster Kingdom. Retrieved 30 April 2012.
  4. O'Brien, Tim (21 September 1998). "Rio Bravo Ride To Open At WB Movie World Australia". Amusement Business. 110 (38): 14, 16.
  5. B, Dorries (10 November 1998). "Fire destroys Wild West flume ride". The Courier Mail (6 - Logan ed.). p. 007.
  6. Cain, Christine (6 December 2003). "Wild West erupts like Krakatoa". Gold Coast Bulletin. p. 2.
  7. Rogers, Jenny (25 December 2003). "Ride back on track Movie World wild with delight at re-opening". Gold Coast Bulletin. p. 7.
  8. McClelland, Tim (30 August 2009). "Wild West Falls HD POV (Movie World, Australia)". Video. YouTube. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
  9. Warner Bros. Movie World. "Wild West Falls Adventure Ride". MyFun. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.