It didn’t. There was a photo on the news from a guest a few days before this came to light, and the crack was starting, but not fully broken off.That was my thought. Then I read somewhere the park said they inspect the ride daily. I find it hard to believe that whole thing just fractured all at once.
Well, ya...'THAT PLAY' failed, so best come up with a better play!I noticed that you are being the “Monday Morning Quarterback”.
In that case the park should revamp its safety protocol and their insurer should demand it and so should the state regulators. If I worked for an employer that would not have closed that ride I would have quit and called the state and the newspapers.It didn’t. There was a photo on the news from a guest a few weeks ago and the crack was starting, but not fully broken off.
The replacement is, from what I've read, the same design. Is it in for the same fate?I think the break probably occurred from vibratory stress as well as expansion and contraction cycles. Lots of steel that move on different planes.
I'm assuming they determined the design was fine and it was faulty fabrication.The replacement is, from what I've read, the same design. Is it in for the same fate?
An article I saw stated a faulty weld. I see more than a faulty weld in the photo in Post #1 here. Looks like the column sheared.I'm assuming they determined the design was fine and it was faulty fabrication.
"If you always do what you've always done, you'll always get what you always got" - Henry FordThe replacement is, from what I've read, the same design. Is it in for the same fate?
My read is it was a turn key deal from designer, the Swiss firm. They may argue in private but seems neither the Swiss company nor the other parties are blaming anyone publicly.Manufacturer blames steel supplier, Steel supplier will blame Fabricator and Fabricator will blame Designer.
I watched the video above from the steel fabricator. Looks like that post design is very common in the industry - I saw at least 3-4 very similar posts in the videos.New column being fabricated to same plan and delivered next week.
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Crack in N.C. roller coaster may have formed 6-10 days before closure, commissioner says
Charlotte-based Carowinds amusement park shut down its Fury 325 ride after a rider's video showed a detached support beam.www.nbcnews.com
https://www.insider.com/carowinds-r...-carolina-days-cracked-pillar-official-2023-7Another reason I don't ride roller coasters. That looks like a fatigue stress crack. Makes me wonder how many inspections passed the column until the crack/failure was so obvious to visual at 30 feet. My bet is that column cracked a lot longer ago than what was found recently.
certainly means the designers are confident in the engineering and there was probably some kind of weld defect involved.I'm glad to hear this!
I was certain that the lawyers, their promotional team and higher up management might think that there would be no getting over the bad "pr" of this rather embarrassing event.
Nothing some new steel couldn't fix, but a bad public relations or impression with the public is sometimes undefeatable.