CrashCoaster
CF Legend
As far as I am aware of, there are no known Intamin Blitz coasters being built next year so far, but what parks would they be a great fit at, and which park is most likely to receive one? What do you think?
That doesn't count, as it is opening this year, not next year... I'm talking which parks should receive one in the future...
And the only things of any note, apart from the air launches and motorbikes I already mentioned, are the new one at Wanda Hefei along with Skycar and the Blue Fire clone, which I should've remembered to be fair. I deliberately didn't include Big Grizzly as China.I wish RCDB had a basic 'launch' search...
Uh....
LIM - https://rcdb.com/r.htm?na=&nm=na&pl=26380&el=12172&ot=2
LSM - https://rcdb.com/r.htm?na=&nm=na&pl=26380&el=12170&ot=2
Air - https://rcdb.com/r.htm?na=&nm=na&pl=26380&el=12164&ot=2
Flywheel - https://rcdb.com/r.htm?na=&nm=na&pl=26380&el=12090&ot=2
Hydraulic - https://rcdb.com/r.htm?na=&nm=na&pl=26380&el=12166&ot=2
Taiwan is recognised by some UN members as an independent country. I guess that's the reason?Yeah, funny RCDB lumps Hong Kong into China but fails to do so with say.... Taiwan.
^ I hadn't really thought about it, but China is very low on launch coasters really. A handful each of S&S air launchers (the best launch type by far to be fair) and a couple of Vekoma booster bikes and that's a out it. Well, a few knockoff Zamperla motorbikes, but they're not worth mentioning. In terms of large-scale launches, it really is just the S&Ss unless I'm having a massive brain fart.
Whilst a plausible statement - and one which I wouldn't be able to refute - I feel like there are engineering solutions to those kind of problems. The large capacitor banks underneath Lightning Rod are a good example of a park trying to reduce the instantaneous draw on the grid and being able to provide very large, irregular, power surges to the ride. I can only assume that many other launch coasters have an electrical design like this, but I can't recall seeing it myself. Of course, those systems have to also be checked and signed off by the local authority, so there's no guarantees there either!Could this be related to issues with the power grid? I mean, the Chinese cities are booming, and places where parks are built seem to be undergoing heavy development all around them as well. Could it be that the authorities are reluctant to allow parks to build rides that draw heavily from the local grid at irregular intervals? I imagine that the electricity usage in developing areas won't stabilize and be fully predictable until a while after the developments are complete. Introducing power-guzzling, somewhat unpredictable rollercoasters to that mix while they're still figuring out how much electricity infrastructure to allocate to the various areas, doesn't come across as the best idea. If this is true, maybe the Chinese will be building more launchers after a while, once the relevant authorities are certain that the local grid can handle them without interruptions.