Watch this video with Will Koch from Holiday World. This kind of stuff just geeks me out. It's the sort of thing you don't see everyday and could only come from the fantastic folks at Holiday World. More after the break.
Want to dig a little deeper? First,  let us define "roll".  That's a rotation around the  track centerline along the train's longitudinal axis; that is, an axis  running from the front to back of the train. The back seat in each car  is raised about an inch, and the running board is cut away (and covered  with a board).  That gives the back axle, which is mounted on a  longitudinal pivot, more room to swing.
A two-bench PTC car (as currently running on Raven and Legend) has a  four-foot wheelbase and about 3'2" from back wheel to front wheel  between cars.  Between cars there is plenty of flexibility because the  drawheads have practically unlimited roll on a short effective  wheelbase.  So the roll rate is limited by the longer distance, the  wheelbase of the car.  On a standard car, as on the Raven or on The  Legend, the rear axle can swing about three degrees in either direction.   That means the maximum allowable roll rate (without lifting any  wheels) is three degrees per four running feet, or more usefully, about  16" of running length per degree.  That means that in order to get up to  a 90-degree bank from flat track, the train needs a minimum of 120 feet  of track.
The track gauge for a wood coaster is roughly 43". The rated 3-degree  swing means there is normally about 1.13 inches of clearance at the  running board for the wheel.  Add another inch at the running  board and in fact it is probably more than that because the wheel is  about 4" outboard of the seat...and the  available space increases from 3.0 degrees to 5.6 degrees.  That  increases the allowable roll rate to 5.6 degrees per four running feet,  or a mere 8.6" of running length per degree of roll.  That reduces the  length required for a 90 degree bank to just over 64 feet. If  the Gravity Guys built the Voyage assuming that the train could roll 1.4  degrees per foot instead of 0.75 degrees per foot, they could have very  easily built places on the ride where the car chassis would actually  hit the track. Not good news.
The  modification on the Voyage train increases its performance, therefore, the train  would have no problem running on the other coasters.  But because the  other trains don't have that mod, they might have problems  running on the Voyage. I believe Gwazi was the  first coaster with PTC trains to get this modification, but though it's been  standard on all of the rides the Gravity Group has built.  I am certain  that both Voyage and Ravine Flyer II have this mod, but I don't know if  CCI ever used it.
Kamis, 20 Mei 2010
An in-depth look at wooden coaster trains
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