User:IronGargoyle/Crystal Beach Cyclone

Crystal Beach Cyclone
Postcard image of the Cyclone, next to the Crystal Ball Room.
Crystal Beach, Ontario
LocationCrystal Beach, Ontario
Park sectionCyclone Bay
Coordinates42°51′42″N 79°03′35″W / 42.861699°N 79.059844°W / 42.861699; -79.059844
StatusRemoved
Opening date1926
Closing dateSeptember 2, 1946
Cost$176,000 CDN
General statistics
TypeWood
ManufacturerTraver Engineering
DesignerHarry G. Traver
Track layoutTwister
Lift/launch systemChain-lift
Height96 ft (29 m)
Drop90 ft (27 m)
Length2,953 ft (900 m)
Speed60 mph (97 km/h)
Duration1:10
Max vertical angle59°
Capacity85 riders per hour
G-force4 Gs
Crystal Beach Cyclone at RCDB

The Crystal Beach Cyclone was a steel-framed wooden roller coaster which operated at Crystal Beach Amusement Park in Crystal Beach, Ontario from the mid-1920s to the mid-1940s. It was designed and built by Harry Traver and his company Traver Engineering. It was the first and longest-lived of Traver's notorious "Terrifying Triplets".

History

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In 1925, Traver Engineering began marketing a new type of roller coaster with an all-steel frame and wooden track. A prototype of this coaster was built and operated at the Philadelphia Sesquicentennial Exposition in 1926. The success of this prototype led the owners of Crystal Beach to order a "Giant Cyclone Safety Coaster" version of this steel-framed coaster for their park. Construction on the Crystal Beach Cyclone began in 1926 and the coaster opened in 1927. While three other Giant Cyclones were built at other parks (the Revere Beach Lightning, the Palisades Park Cyclone and the more compact Oaks Park Zip), the Crystal beach version was the most famous and longest lasting. It was eventually dismantled in September 1946 due to the high maintenance costs and falling revenues. Some of the wood and steel from the Cyclone was used by John Allen and Herbert Schmeck (both designers for the Philadelphia Toboggan Company) in the construction of the Crystal Beach Comet coaster in 1948.

Construction

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Over 225 tonnes of metal were used in building the ride, which used a steel support structure instead of the more traditional wood. Having said this, it is still considered a "woodie", due to the construction of the track (300 X 25 millimetre wood laminants topped by a flat steel rail). Total length of wood used was about 6,100 metres - all British Columbia fir. At night, 1,000 small incandescent lamps lit the ride.

Ride layout

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The layout consisted of a twisted arrangement of track with many curved, and steeply angled drops, banking at up to 80 degrees, the trains traversed multiple banked spirals, figure-8 sections and undulating "jazz track". The layout of the Crystal Beach Cyclone was similar to the other members of the "Terrifying Triplets". The main difference in the design was that the spiral on the Cyclone at Palisades was even tighter than the other two because of the extremely limited space in the park.[1]

Operation

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The ride ran one or two trains consisting of three or five four-passenger cars depending on crowds. Later, the trains would be permanently reduced to three cars to keep forces on the structure lower.

Ride time was around 40 seconds, discounting station to top of the lift, which extended the time to a total of about 70 seconds. This would have been slightly faster than before opening day because almost half a metre had been removed from the height of the second hill due to roll-back problems.

Reports say the ride at Crystal Beach drew 75,000 on opening day and crowds were so heavy that a railing was broken by those pushing to get close to the new ride. One patron rode 67 times that day and on its second day of operation, two boys rode 52 times.

Accidents and incidents

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Over 5 million rides were given in the Cyclone's 20-year history with only one fatality. This occurred on opening day May 30, 1938, when 22-year-old Amos Wiedrich apparently stood up to take his suitcoat off, was thrown from the train after the first drop and fell to his death, being hit seconds later by the train he had been riding in. A failed lap bar was deemed to be the cause and the rider's estate was awarded $3000 by the court.[2]

The Crystal Beach ride also kept a nurse in the station who was there to assist anyone who fainted, although she was originally hired to help lower insurance costs. Later, it is rumored that she was kept on the payroll to help keep the Cyclone known as one of the fiercest coasters around. Popular coaster lore says that she kept smelling salts on her and that a hot dog stand adjacent to the coaster sold splints.

Maintenance issues

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These coasters, unfortunately, turned out to be a maintenance headache due to the high forces generated on the structure. Some reduction was gained through the use of three-car trains, but still the track suffered. According to Robert Cartmell's book "The Incredible Scream Machine: A History of the Roller Coaster", a man who worked at Palisades while the Traver-designed Cyclone operated said that he could not remember one week where it operated everyday. Structural and mechanical failures prevented it from being able to be open on anything resembling a regular schedule and the sheer viciousness of the ride did not help to endear the coaster to the park's visitors.[3]

In 1938, the entire ride at Crystal Beach was overhauled (supposedly by Herbert Schmeck) with many extra stress ties added.

Ride Experience

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Speed & G-Forces

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The "Cyclone" was said to place over 4 Gs of force on passengers, and had a top speed approaching 97 kilometres per hour (60 mph). Although the G-force statistic is likely true (and in fact may be low), however the top speed advertised might be an exaggeration. The maximum velocity attainable from lift height to ground level, which the first drop did, would be 84 kilometres per hour (52 mph) with a zero initial velocity. If the cyclone imparted an initial velocity to the cars at the top of the hill (say from a lift chain) the car may have reached such advertised speeds.

Riders Quotes

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Ed Cowley, who had ridden The "Cyclone" many times in his life, said:



Erma Andrews, who piloted biplanes from the age of sixteen and became a registered nurse, rode the Crystal Beach "Cyclone" many times and recalled the following story:



In September 2000 'coasterglobe.com interviewed Ed Mills, who described his experience of riding the Cyclone in 1945:[4]


References

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  1. ^ Munch, Richard; Richard Hershey (June 1982). Lee Bush (ed.). Harry G. Traver: Legends of Terror. Amusement Park Books. pp. 99–100. ISBN 0-935408-02-9.
  2. ^ "Harry G. Traver and the 'Terrifying Triplets'". Designboom. Archived from the original on January 21, 2015. Retrieved June 12, 2017.
  3. ^ Cartmell, Robert (28 June 1987). The Incredible Scream Machine: A History of the Roller Coaster. Popular Press. p. 252. ISBN 0-87972-342-4. Retrieved 27 April 2012.
  4. ^ Kay, James. "Lost Legends: Crystal Beach Cyclone". Coasterglobe.com. Archived from the original on October 21, 2009. Retrieved June 12, 2017.
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