Hershey, Pennsylvania – Thursday, July 19th, 2012






Hershey, Pennsylvania – Thursday, July 19th, 2012![]() Tudor Square is Hersheypark's British-inspired entry themed midway, slightly unusual in that it's located outside the main entry gates. Beyond it are two more themed entry pathways, Rhineland and Founder's Circle, before you get to the park proper and have any choice over which direction to go. Hersheypark certainly likes making a long-winded opening statement. ![]() Crowds form as they wait for the gates to drop. I have to think this is somewhat counter-productive for them. Why not let the crowds in a half hour earlier and hold them at the end of Founder's Circle? Seems it would ease the bottleneck and encourage more perusal of their many boutique shops along the entry pathways. ![]() Last time I was at Hersheypark was 2008, and before that was 2004. Maybe I'm just on a four-year cycle with this park, but there does seem to be some statistically significant relationship between me visiting Hershey, Pennsylvania, and this park debuting a massive Intamin steel coaster in a given year. ![]() Hersheypark's owner, the Hershey Entertainment Company, is a separate entity from the Hershey Chocolate Company, which I think is partly why the Hershey chocolate theme is somewhat limited inside the park. I do wonder how many families arrive and are disappointed by the relative lack of chocolate references in park; they only just added the Reese's Xtreme Cup Challenge in 2006 to meet some of those guest expectations. ![]() Do you remember that time in 2005 when Hersheypark decided they were going to build that weird 4D vertical zigzag coaster called Turbulence right next to this carousel, but then after plans were announced and ground broken they abruptly canceled it after the manufacturer couldn't keep the agreed-upon price? A weird, almost forgettable footnote in the park's history today, one I think may have been for the best although I do somewhat lament the demise of the double giant wheel. ![]() With twelve-passenger trains dispatching no more frequently than every 90 seconds, the last place you want to find yourself is at the far end of one of these. I really lament the trend (starting around 2003 I think?) that high-profile, low-capacity coasters came in vogue. Launches, vertical drops and the like just ruin a train's length... Next: Canada’s WonderlandPrevious: Six Flags Great AdventureHershey, Pennsylvania – Wednesday, June 11th, 2008We arrived at Hersheypark with just enough time to get a bite to eat at a Red Robin behind the park near Lightning Racer before getting in for the free preview night starting at 7:30. Says the lady at the ticket counter, “You sure you want to use this now, it’s getting pretty late already…” Just as she’s halfway through ripping the stub off my Dutch Wonderland/Hersheypark combo ticket I bought earlier today, I stop her and point out a second time that we’re here for the preview night. Unsure of herself, she calls over a supervisor who confirms for us that, yes, we are entitled to one preview night on the combo ticket. She takes out a big marker and writes “NOT VOID” on my half ripped ticket and returns it to me, The park was displaying healthy crowds for a Wednesday evening, and yet it was clear that none of the lines would be unmanageable. First up is The Comet, which is nearly an essential first roller coaster ride of any visit to Hersheypark. I’m always torn about my feelings for The Comet. On the one hand, it’s a classic with a unique T design layout, and the park always does an impeccable job at keeping it clean and polished looking, like it’s still a signature attraction to be advertised front and center rather than an old relic they keep around in a back corner of the park just for niche appeal (Dorney Park’s Thunderhawk, Cedar Point’s Blue Streak, etc.) On the other hand, it just doesn’t appropriate it’s speed very well, Speaking of well-preserved classics, hidden at the end of the Comet Hollow midway is our next ride, Sooperdooperlooper. Unlike the Comet, which had a 10 minute wait or so, Sooperdooperlooper was a walk-on for nearly every seat except the front. Like the Comet, I also wouldn’t say that this was one of Schwarzkopf’s better looping designs at the time, forgoing the unique terrain S-curve dives and long build-up into the looping centerpiece found on Magic Mountain’s Revolution, instead starting off with a fast drop right into the loop, and then spending the rest of the ride behaving as a mine train running next to the riverside. And that really doesn’t matter here, either, because it has so much retro charm in it I could hardly ask for it any other way. From here we made a quick jump on the Coal Cracker – still one of the nicer flumes around – while on the way to get a ride in on the Great Bear. I think it was somewhere around this area as the dusk was starting to turn to night that I appreciated what a truly magnificent park Hersheypark is. I think I might have to tie this park with Cedar Point for being one of the most pleasant, large-scale amusement parks to simply be in, provided the crowds aren’t too heavy and the weather not too bad. (And possibly Six Flags over Georgia, I don’t know, haven’t been there in a while and don’t know what Six Flags has done with the place. I must also mention Busch Gardens Europe on that list, but it’s more limited coaster collection and extensive themed areas makes me want to group it more with the Big Themers rather than the aformentioned) Everywhere is landscaped and while the architecture However, if there is one slight problem I have with the park as a whole, it’s that the coasters are all too short of experiences. Most parks of this size have that one (at least) ‘signature attraction’, whereas at Hershey, when I get to thinking what I want my big last ride of the night to be, there’s no clear answer to that. All of their coasters are short enough that two trains are all they need to service them (except for Fahrenheit and their single-car coasters, which is clear why more than two are needed on those rides). There’s no midcourse brakes, no minute-and-a-half long lifts that lead into a 4000ft+ layout; even their Arrow mine train, Trailblazer, a coaster style that’s notorious for featuring two or even three lifts at other parks, is a surprisingly brief ride experience here at Hersheypark. I think we got a seat in near the back of the train on our first true night ride of the evening, and even with the cool, quick skirts between the light next to Storm Runner and the darkness hidden behind a patch of trees, the experience still leaves much to be desired. Oh well, I’m feeling pretty good when I get off, maybe because this is the first evening that’s cooled off after the major heat wave from the past couple days, and Hersheypark is just so cool looking at night, and I know there’s way cooler things ahead. Like Storm Runner. With less than a 5 minute wait, at night. The front row is singing to me. While waiting in the open air station I can see clearly the small orange spike on Fahrenheit, all lit up like a beacon between the dark trees and navy blue night sky, and I watch as several trains slowly crest the top. Looks like operations are running quite smoothly over there, I can’t wait to get up close and see it all in person for the first time. Fahrenheit fits the park quite naturally, showing it’s brightly colored twisted track all in clear view of the midway compared to the more conservatively colored, reclusive Storm Runner threaded through the woods and valleys of Pioneer Frontier across the way. It’s also centered perfectly along the main midway to the Midway America, creating a much needed pull in that direction away from the smaller side-loops that are home to all the other major coasters the park has so far (Storm Runner, Great Bear…) The queue unfortunately is probably so far Hershey’s least impressive, simple metal bars holding a chain link fence, narrowly shoehorned on a triangular plot of concrete in the infield of the station/brake/prelift area of the ride. Thankfully tonight there’s hardly a 10 minute wait to ride. The small, three-car train makes it’s way around the turn to the stretch of prelift track. There’s a slight pause as the two chains synchronize the catch dogs that push on the back of the train; this lift is actually more similar to Intamin’s cable elevator lifts than a traditional chain lift, especially in that it’s a perfectly silent, smooth ride up to the top. And wow, even though from the ground the vertical tower seems a bit too similar a concept to the slightly larger (but less steep on one end) red one across the midway, the experience of the slow approach only to be tipped all the way on your back (which I must say is not a natural sensation) starts the ride off on an entirely different and more curious note than Storm Runner’s more direct, wham-bam approach. The first drop, okay, maybe a little disappointing compared to Maverick’s. While 2° ‘deeper’ (since ‘steepness’ technically maxes out once you hit 90°) than Maverick’s 95° drop, and 14 ft. higher, it has a much wider pull-over radius that makes the descent far less sudden and with more minor negative g’s, especially when experienced in the back. Still, when I compare the first lift/drop with other similarly styled looping coasters (such as Led Zeppelin’s straight-up-straight-down approach), Fahrenheit leaves them behind in the dust. From here there’s a long pull out, featuring a moment’s pause in the pacing to enjoy the surge of speed up into my most anticipated single element, The cobra roll is sort of the dive loop turned inside out, and unfortunately there’s almost no snap into the rotation at the tops of the loops, and the middle bowl pullout is much too wide to get any good, interesting pacing, this element serves only to flip you upside down in a way that aims to be only moderately disorienting. Also, coming out of the cobra roll on every ride I had, there was some rather noticeable shaking. Come to think of it, Fahrenheit did suffer from an unfortunate case of vibrations throughout a lot of the ride (at least for being a new ride, and compared to Storm Runner), although only in the second half of the cobra roll Out of the cobra roll is another slight hesitation in the pacing as the track anticipates the sudden snap into the first corkscrew. Hate to break out the Maverick comparisons again, but the twists on Fahrenheit actually are corkscrews and not pseudo zero-g rolls with heavily curved entries. However, these corkscrews have a lot more spunk in them than any other corkscrews you’ll find around, with a very sharp, noticeable snap at the top of each, From the second corkscrew the pacing wastes no time into continuing to roll out into a tight, steeply pitched overbank that offers some pretty fast angular rotation as the cars cruise around it, twisting out and hitting a delicious pop of airtime in the small bunny that follows. This is immediately followed by a second curve in the opposite direction as the first Getting off that first ride we still had about 10-15 more minutes until the park was scheduled to close, and the line had gone down even more since we first joined. Two more rides in the middle and back seat and we were done for the night, time to head out to our hotel which unfortunately was on the other side of Harrisburg. So, was Fahrenheit what I was hoping for? Not really. What I had been hoping for was a ride that put first and foremost an emphasis on pacing, and pacing that features both a perfect rhythmical symmetry but also dynamic progression throughout the ride experience. After the first surprise negative-g drop and extended lead-in to anticipate the Norwegian loop, I’d be hit with an element that mirrors itself, features lots of power but slightly slow pacing. From here it would progress into a tighter paced element, also offering the same two ‘notes’ mirrored against 5… 1-1, 2-2, 3-3, 4-5-4-5Get it? Well, it didn’t actually work like that. For one, the final turn and rise into the brakes didn’t offer much so that final 4-5-4-5 pattern of progression I described above kind of falls apart, coupled with the fact that the Norwegian Loop and Cobra Roll don’t really have any pacing, they’re just there to turn you upside down in different ways like any other loops, the whole structure I was hoping for just isn’t there. What I had instead was simply another mega-looper. That is, a mega-looper with a crazy lift and first drop, still pretty unique elements, and even several very strong pops of air that most certainly are not standard on most other mega-loopers I’ve been on (at least as long as B&M are still the chief supplier of your prototypical mega-loopers). And I’ll be damned Next: Hersheypark (pt. 2)Previous: Dutch WonderlandAs an added bonus, if you have the NoLimits Roller Coaster Simulator you can enjoy this free download of my re-creation of Fahrenheit (click the image to the right).
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