CCTV would be property of Alton Towers, at at their discretion to share with the public. Given that the investigation of the accident is still ongoing, it would be short sighted to release evidence of the accident until all details have been sorted out.Howie said:Is the area covered by CCTV? There's bound to be more footage of the ride in the moments leading up to the accident, surely?
Not that I want to see it or anything - the aftermath clip was chilling enough - but to help uncover what happened/ what went wrong.
The BBC, for example, are still using the Daily Fail's story that the second car stopped at the top of the inversion!
Be nice if that myth was put to rest...
Hyde said:CCTV would be property of Alton Towers, at at their discretion to share with the public. Given that the investigation of the accident is still ongoing, it would be short sighted to release evidence of the accident until all details have been sorted out.Howie said:Is the area covered by CCTV? There's bound to be more footage of the ride in the moments leading up to the accident, surely?
Not that I want to see it or anything - the aftermath clip was chilling enough - but to help uncover what happened/ what went wrong.
Slayed said:^Beat me to it!
If they were confident it was due to human error, than they may have to demonstrate to H&S that staff & procedures are safe before they can reopen in general.
ems991 said:This is probably a dumb question, I don't know that much about how roller coasters work.
But if you watch a POV of Smiler is there not a set of brakes between the lift and where the collision occurred? Or could they not be used to stop the car are they just designed to slow it before it heads into the next inversion? I'm just curious.
Also where is the source for it being held on the lift as I can't find that anywhere but I know from a friend who was in the park that it had been stuck earlier in the day on the lift.
wakey1512 said:Interesting point on the article by the guardian that the operators room is completely enclosed and in no view of the track whatsoever - relying on a control panel to tell you where the trains are etc. Perhaps a practice that should be stopped asap. The operators need to see the ride they are controlling to keep on top of the job?
I feel like as time has gone on the media in general hype all things up more and more with the oversharing culture that we have. There has been an increase in the number of media outlets that exist (anyone can create a website or twitter) and create hype because people will see it mentioned again and again and thus the incident will seem like a bigger deal to people.Ben said:Slayed said:^Beat me to it!
If they were confident it was due to human error, than they may have to demonstrate to H&S that staff & procedures are safe before they can reopen in general.
Yeah, I get that, I just wonder why that didn't kick in with Hayley Williams, RMT, Saw etc.
I imagine the media cover is probably more a part of it tbh.
snes2 said:Anybody have an idea of what exactly is going to happen to the ride?