spicy said:
I believe it's a case of both. The manufacturer will give a recommended height limit and then it's up to the park to increase the height limit to limit their target audience.
Yeah, I think this the bottom line...
spicy said:
One of the best examples is Thorpe putting Saw at 1.4m when most other Eurofighters are 1.2m.
It's possible here (as Smiler has a 1.4m restriction too), that the more "extreme" Eurofighters with many inversions are falling foul of this? They may think that it's just not a suitable ride, even though riders of 1.2m are safe to ride in the restraints?
spicy said:
In the case of Rattlesnake I heard that a child was once injured on the coaster which ended up on them increasing the height limit, it used to be 1.2m. H&S have always been on top of CWoA it seems.
I know for a fact the height limit on Storm Force 10 at DMP was changed following an accident. The original limit was 0.9m, but a boy leant forward on the drop and when it hit the splash, he smashed his mouth open. So H&S forced DMP to up the limit - yet they didn't force other parks to do the same.
So it may just be risk assessment, and possibly the company insurers who make the demands at certain parks?
Joey said:
When I went to Cedar Point, I noticed their enterprise has a ridiculous height restriction of 54" (1.4ish) when they can be as low as .9m (36"ish). That is a huge difference.
The Enterprise at Alton has a 0.9m limit to ride, but a 1.2m limit for "solo riding". It could be that maybe they don't have this dual option so go for an upper limit? It is very weird though.
Ben said:
And how like, B&Ms here the standard is 1.4m in America it's 54 inches (or is it 52?), which is less. And then I swear the European ones are usually the same as America? Metric spite.
Yeah, it's 1.37m I think for the B&Ms in the US, but in Europe it seems to be 1.4m. At least in the UK, Europa Park and Port Aventura. Possibly the US measurement in other parks, but clearly the rides are safe for slightly smaller riders.
It does beg the question "just how small IS the actually lowest height?"