SFGAmWorld.com
Untitled Document
Park Information
Latest News
Great America
Roller Coasters
Rides
Hurricane Harbor
Water Slides
Water Attractions
Advertisement

SFGAm funfacts(tell me)

Talk about anything that has to do with Six Flags Great America and Hurricane Harbor here.
Postby Ilovthevu' on October 27th, 2011, 11:52 pm
CoasterDude12-2 wrote:I'm going to take a guess, and say that DejaVu is the only ride in Great America history to open in October.


Sort of yes, and sort of no. The Superstition movie (with Elvira) for Space Shuttle America opened in October. You say ride, and thus I can't say the Pictorium Haunted movie thing, but Space Shuttle was a ride at the park.
"I've been staring at the world, waiting. All the trouble and all the pain we're facing. Too much light to be livin' in the dark. Why waste time? We only got one life. Together we can be the CHANGE. So go and let your heart burn bright"
Ilovthevu'

 
Posts: 4398
Images: 0
Joined: June 4th, 2004, 7:54 pm

Postby CoasterNick3157 on October 28th, 2011, 12:27 am
CoasterDude12-2 wrote:I'm going to take a guess, and say that DejaVu is the only ride in Great America history to open in October.


Hopefully that won't happen again, they should've made it a new ride for 2002.
CoasterNick3157

User avatar
 
Posts: 452
Joined: April 4th, 2008, 11:35 pm
Location: Yorkville, IL

Postby tribar on October 28th, 2011, 6:58 am
^That would have been a good idea considering I don't think the park got anything in 2002.
tribar

User avatar
 
Posts: 1078
Joined: August 6th, 2010, 3:29 pm

Postby FParker185 on October 29th, 2011, 12:33 am
DV was pretty much marketed in 2002 as a new ride.

Another late opening was Shockwave, that opened sometime in July of 1988
Favorite Wood Coasters: The Voyage, Ravine Flyer II, Thunderhead, Balder
Favorite Steel: Voltron Nevera, Steel Vengeance, Expedition GeForce, Olympia Looping
Parks visited: 232, Coasters Ridden: Steel: 894, Wood: 179, Total: 1073
FParker185

User avatar
 
Posts: 4508
Joined: February 5th, 2004, 12:04 am
Location: Joliet, IL

Postby BP317 on October 29th, 2011, 12:43 am
I remember in 2004 when the park opened for the season Ragin Cajun was a concrete plot with the one small hill at the end of the ride as the only thing built, and King Chaos was completely built at that point. Cajun still managed to open earlier than Chaos.

Ragin Cajun opened memorial weekend and King Chaos a few weeks (if not longer) after that. I remember seeing King Chaos cycle for the first time when the HUSS engineers were working on it, man that thing was jacked up. I'm talking severe swaying and loud banging noises, it looked like it was going to collapse. The look on SFGAm maintenence staff's faces was priceless.

Also SUFs opening day the railings in the exit path were still covered with newspaper because they handnt been painted yet, there was just a grey frame with no sign at the entrance, and the ground was all mud that still had tracks from construction vehicles. The grass didn't start really growing in until like August, and even the small things like the yellow station gate lines in the station didn't get painted until late summer/fall. Was kind of funny the pre recorded spiel saying "please stand behind the yellow safety line" when there was no yellow safety line.

I consider DejaVu a new for 2002 ride, a very small miniscule amount of people got on it in 2001 considering it was only "open" weekends in October, how much it was downtime it had during the day, how low the capacity was, etc. Even in 2002 the ride rarely ever opened before the late afternoon, if at all. In 2003 it didn't even open until late July. So really it could have been new for 2003 considering most people that went to the park didn't even get a chance to ride it until then :). Also it's kind of ironic right when DejaVu opened in 2001, V2 had some sort of major break down and was closed all of Fright Fest.

We can talk about the lines for the new rides when they opened, but in my opinion nothing compares to Hurricane Harbor in 2005. Hurricane Harbor's line would fill the entire queue area back past the entrance, I even saw it once going into Hometown Sqare next to Orbit in the middle of the day. Keep in mind this was just to get in the park when it was already at capacity, the lines were still long once you actually got into the park. That would be extremely frustrating to say the least.

Another fun fact is that try riding Viper before 10:30 in the morning, it's in warm up mode until then, which means the chain does not slow down at all making the ride track significantly faster unlike how it normally runs where it slows down at the top to reduce stress. Also another thing about Viper is that it's first year its entrance was in Hometown Square right next to Rolling Thunders entrance. Obviously the entrance was moved the next year when and Southwest Teritorry was built (as part of a several-stage expansion as Viper opened in 95, SWT opened in 96, Giant Drop opened in 97, and Raging Bull opened in 99) and Rolling Thunder was sent to the Great Escape.

On the topic of SWT, back when Time Warner owned Six Flags they had plans to make the queue and part of the ride have more detailed theming, but when Premier bought the company from Time Warner they cut pretty much cut all of it and just built the ride with the themed station building. The same can be said for many other parks around this time, as you can see the Superman at SFMM which has Time-Warner esque theming compared to Premier-era esque theming on the later Superman rides.

In the case of rides like Bull and Goliath at SFMM it really turned out to not be a big deal as no one could tell and they were both extremely popular, but for later rides it became pretty evident that the company had gone from the story telling path that Time Warner was big on with relatively well themed rides like Batman and Giant Drop to a more traditional approach (or in SUF at SFGAm's case, plywood walls). However, the story that the Time Warner creative team came up with for the ride was put in the press release.
Raging Bull is named after a ferocious beast that terrorized the citizens of the old Southwest Territory until they fled the town and built the beautiful courtyards and mission seen today. The raging bull still lurks in the ruins of the old mission, which today serves as the loading station for this unpredictable, wild roller coaster.

http://www.sfgamworld.com/coasters/PressRelease/RagingBull.php
BP317
Webmaster/Site Admin

User avatar
 
Posts: 2135
Joined: September 2nd, 2006, 12:09 am

Postby BP317 on November 8th, 2011, 12:34 am
Before founding his company in the hotel business, Willard Marriott used to run a few A&W Root Beer franchises on the east coast that sold A&W root beer glasses for a nickel. At the time it was standard for these places to close during winter and re open in the spring, Willard did not want to close in Washington DC and decided to become the first A&W to serve food and stay open during the winter. He renamed his resturaunt to "The Hot Shoppe" and overnight changed all the signage and menu to include food and of course kept the 5 cent root beer. As a tribute to his early business roots, at Great America there was a place called "The Hot Shoppe" where they sold root beer for a nickel in Hometown Square where Trudy's Sweet Shoppe is located now (ironically right next to Willards Whizzer).

Here's a link to a picture of it as Great America Parks doesn't allow image URLs to be posted
http://www.greatamericaparks.com/images/albums/food/hotshoppe001.jpg
BP317
Webmaster/Site Admin

User avatar
 
Posts: 2135
Joined: September 2nd, 2006, 12:09 am

Postby CoasterNick3157 on November 8th, 2011, 2:18 am
tribar wrote:^That would have been a good idea considering I don't think the park got anything in 2002.


They got a new floats for their parade in 2002. Big Whoop
CoasterNick3157

User avatar
 
Posts: 452
Joined: April 4th, 2008, 11:35 pm
Location: Yorkville, IL

Previous

Return to Six Flags Great America Forum

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 46 guests

Privacy Policy About Us Copyright Disclaimer E-Mail SFGAmWorld
COPYRIGHT - SFGAmWorld.com
All content and images on this site are Copyright 2001 - SFGAmWorld.com and may not be used without permission.
This is NOT the official site of Six Flags Great America, SFGAmWorld.com is not affilated or endorsed by Six Flags Great America.
SFGAmWorld.com does not make any guarantee on the accuracy of the information on this website and cannot be held responsible by the use of this information.
SIX FLAGS and all related indicia are trademarks of Six Flags Theme Parks Inc. ®, TM and © . The official Six Flags site can be found at SixFlags.com
BATMAN, SUPERMAN and all related characters and elements are trademarks of © DC Comics.
LOONEY TUNES and all related characters and elements are trademarks of and © Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc.©
The Wiggles Pty Ltd. SCOOBY-DOO and all related characters and elements are trademarks of and © Hanna-Barbera.