As a roller coaster enthusiast, PLEASE BLOW THIS COMMENT UP OR AT LEAST PIN IT BECAUSE PEOPLE NEED TO KNOW! Anyways, carnival rides the one year inspection is obviously terrible but, regular non traveling amusement parks are way safer because rides are inspected multiple times everyday to keep you safe. Carnivals though, very sketchy and they are traveling rides so they are poorly constructed. I don’t think spending the extra money is bad if you value your life. I can blabber your ears about safety on rides but that would be too long so I would recommend searching up “roller coaster safety” or maybe “flat ride safety” (flat rides are thrill rides that aren’t rides like roller coasters) but trust me regular non travelling amusement parks are wayyy safer.
I was trapped on the Top of a Ferris Wheel at 4 yrs old. It took 8 hours to get me down It was extremely Traumatizing. I thank God my Aunt was on with me and was able to keep us both calm. Safety Checks should be every time they set up and everyday they are operating.
I used to be a fireman, and whenever the carnival came to town for the 4-H fair we always inspected the rides. If they don't have a up-to-date inspection sticker on their ride we will not let them put it up until the state issued a permit
I’m supposed to go to the Woodstock fair tomorrow and all my 6 yo son wants to do is ride rides now… I’m actually terrified.. was already thinking about it then this pops up 😅
@@Kiq_Ash just look at the ride and see if it has a state certificate for the year that you go. They have to put the certificate where the public can see it and it has to be affixed to the ride
I loved my grandma. As a kid, she would keep us safe by being brutally honest. Every time we went to the carnival, she told us about the time the fireball ride got stuck upsidedown for hours. She also told us about the alien spaceship looking one (zero gravyity wall thing) scalped a girl with long hair while it was spinning. I dont know if the second one is real, but it always scared me to think about it because my hair was long at the time. Still don't go to the carnival.
Last time when I went to six flags there was a giant swing that make you go to 400 ft and when I was walking I saw that lot of people got stuck up there at 400 ft and my cousin hear them saying help me and I never going on that ride
@dakotahmoose1192 in the uk some traveling fairs are stored outside but under thick tarps. We have very stringent rules and saftey checks over here though and a very tightnit fairground community
Dude, an Ex of mine went on the carnival one that stayed up there for four hours. He said he was bout to die, all the blood just stayed in his head, and he couldn’t move at all. That stuff scary. Crazy how corrupt people will be for money.
I’m not trying to be rude or whatever but the ride was only stopped due to emergency systems doing their jobs, so being stuck for so long would’ve likely been safer than the ride continuing. Still I understand how bad it is to be upside down for so long, but just know it was for your safety and things like that almost never happen
@@vitrickgoopbrother i have tracked you across youtube you have always said these stories are fake but now i have the upperhand if you look at the people listed in the incident report you can see this guys name checkmate
I was one of the people trapped on that ride. Worst day of my life. You don't know what your body and brain feels like after you've been left hanging upside down for just under four hours. I had a migraine for a week, and none of us were able to successfully sue the amusement park owner. Don't even ask me why.
True, stay away. Our son was 9yo when he was thrown from a carnival ride and landed on concrete, lacerating his spleen. He spent 10 days in Providence Childrens Hospital, 5 of those days he wasnt able to eat and was only allowed ice chips to drink. Of course, doctor's had him on IV solution to maintain his hydration, but, nothing else, because, the doctor's feared he may need emergency surgery if his spleen ruptured. Fortunately, he survived and is now 34yo. Don't even think about filing a lawsuit, these gypsy carnivals are shifty and even a lawyer can't pin them down. We paid thousands in hospital bills from this incident. Don't risk your child's life, it definitely isn't worth it.
ALSO i was used as an operator for a carnival ride and was only taught how to operate the ride a day before the event started. YOU ONLY HAVE to be 16 to be a ride operator and for most of these companies to allow you to work there you have to be at least 16. And most of the time they also have hired teens take it down when they leave town, its actually really bad
Yep I worked as a "Carney" for literally a single day and almost died from shit safety standards ... I noped out after they told me to scale a Farris wheel with a harness that was frayed and flat out missing important support eyelets
@@Just_a_Goth do what? Train people? I have, hundreds of them. Be a member of OABA and IAAPA? I have been for nearly 3 decades. I work ride maintenance and refurbishment, with multiple factories and manufacturers that trained me. I have gathered intelligence for ride accidents and investigations and am a contributor to the ride accidents database. What have YOU done?
For as long as I've been to carnivals, whenever we're on the rides, we feel scared, horrified and have that feeling that we don’t feel safe sometimes even as a kid.
its like saying to never go in a car or go on a plane. sht happens, people die, stuff breaks down because its all man made and nothing lasts forever. you can stay curled up in a ball never living or having fun for the fear that you might get hurt. its rare that stuff breaks down to the point of causing serious injury
The roller coaster in Charlotte, NC is The Fury at Carowinds. It’s a Gigacoaster. I loved that ride but it’s terrifying they let the damage get that far. The drop and speed on that coaster is crazy and there is a part where you go underground.
That's awesome. But also, I blame whoever created the ride, had no clue or idea how the ride is suppose to be and have, not to mention the amount of people that one may even go through a serious death worser then everything I could think of.
@@average-art3222 They are so dangerous. I'm pretty sure it's not the manufacturer. All of that stems from lax carnival set up, and tear down ride workers, and lax ride inspectors. Losing bolts, and not caring to find them, or replace them. Things are a bit different now. They actually have third party inspectors. They even wear uniform shirts now, so things are much more strict now. As it should be. In the 70's they were pretty much policing themselves. This is NEVER a good policy! Using an outside party to inspect their work, if nothing else, it keeps everybody honest. I haven't worked for the carnival since the early 80's. I'm sure things have to be better now, however, I still don't feel good about it. ❤
@@average-art3222 It's really not the manufacturer. It's the carnival. They're the ones that set up the rides, and tear them down. They didn't do a good job keeping bolts and other components separated. They just threw them in a box. The manufacturer wouldn't be responsible for keeping track of them. Once they're sold, the manufacturer is out of it. ❤
@@margiecook6879 the responsibility falls on YOU. if bolts are missing, go buy new ones, turn in the receipts and problem is solved. Don't wait for someone else to do it. Furthermore, didn't you say in another comment you only worked for one day? How do you know those bolts weren't replaced?
@@texasktea Yes, for the same reason I trust a skyscraper to not collapse when i'm on the top floor. Because it's been built with the specific design to last.
FYI, MOST fairs have to inspect rides/concessions BEFORE the fair is operational. I traveled. My family traveled. Yeah sometimes things break down, kinda like airplanes and trains and cars.
exactly! people gotta live a little. you cant say to never drive or go on a plane because it might crash, sht happens. and yeah i agree they should do more to prevent it, but im gonna keep going on rides because its fun. our state fair does inspection daily before opening times, and an inspection 1 week before opening aswell (and the day before)
I remember being traumazied at a very young age at a similar traveling Carnival ride in my area. I believe I was too small for the ride they put me on. It was dangerous. The seatbelt was too large and as I was spinning upside down, nothing was holding me in place. Be careful with your kids.
I live in Antioch, and I'm friends with the kids' older brother. Truly was a big predicament. Carnival left town during the night. We watched the last truck leave from my job.
Well, as an ex worker in Australia (Ferris wheel and zipper) I can tell you legally crack testing is done every 2 years and random inspections are carried out multiple times throughout the year by operational health and safety. Now these guys don't always know what they're looking at, but definitely check things such as foundations and leads. Sometimes things occur that cause a breakdown, for example an employee not checking the generator has sufficient fuel leading to power loss. Also in the case of Ferris wheels if they are overbalanced the ride may 'slip' causing it to spin uncontrolled until the heaviest point stops at the bottom. This can be scary for the passengers and workers alike, however you are safe in the cart granted you stay seated at all times. Also if you have a heavy ride on soft ground or experience long heavy rain it is essential to check the levelling each morning to ensure the ride hasn't sunk at all into the ground. I did that job for almost a decade and was very dedicated to safety, unfortunately with the nature of travel many casual employees just don't have that dedication.
Idk about carnivals but the roller coaster one is at a Cedar Fair Park. That's the same company that owns Kings Island and Cedar Point. Each park in the chain is required to inspect every ride before it opens every day. Here in Ohio when something major happens the ride is shut down until the state can complete their investigation. Both major incidents that happened here in Ohio under Cedar Fair have resulted in one ride getting removed and another getting completely reprofiled by another manufacturer than the original one. That ride that was shown in the video is in Carolina. Depending on which side of the border that coaster is on, that state probably has the same regulations Ohio does. If not at least Cedar Fair does and they have a habit of fixing majorly broken rides or removing them. However, because they do such a good job of maintaining those rides it usually doesn't get to that point.
I would just like to add that from what I heard no one got hurt on that roller coaster. They shut down the ride immediately after they received word of the instant.
I have worked for the North American Midway which is the biggest, safest traveling carnival for 13 years and the biggest reason people get hurt on rides is cause the patron either takes their safety belt off or they dont listen to the ride operator. Its a one in a million chance for the ride to malfunction and hurt someone. The rides get inspected every single time they are set up and before open every day.
Go to Knobles they check their rides and roller-coasters every day. Knobles is also non-traviling. If you are really that scared now, I suggest camping by the twister and see how they do it. The amusement park opens at 12, so it gives them time to look through these things. When you warm up to this, I suggest checking out the Phoenix.
I used to do security at afew of those carnivals, omg them rides r so rickety & shitty. And being there alone overnight was even creepier, and u hear ding ding ding!!!! Out of nowhere, or a ride starts moving, lol. Like a horror movie every time
Is anyone going to talk about the poor boy? I’m in tears, I really hope he’s okay. He has a full life ahead of him and he’s only 10!? I can’t imagine what he’s been through. Edit: I’m aware of the reply’s that he lived. That relived me, but again, I know that he lived now. Thank you for the information. Edit 2: war in the reply’s💀
Blud is crying over some random 10 yr old death☠️ nah bro; tons of ppl die everyday, I worked at a retirement home and seen ppl of ppl die at least once a month. It’s just death really 🤷♂️
Exactly. I work for an amusement park, and multiple of our rides have been shut down because failure to check for safety belt. Employees being suspended for weeks because of it.
Man I use to work at these mobile carnivals especially the Wisconsin State Fair at West Allis on August 2011. So many dark secrets I discovered. Including a corrupted governor who engineer its tragedy to get back in office.
There needs to be more regulation on carnival rides or they should be banned all together. I’ve seen way too many rides falling apart due to their poor maintenance/management
@@Captainrex5741 On May 24, 1984, a 5-year-old boy riding Cedar Creek Mine Ride suffered a fractured skull and bruises after falling from the train's front seat And alot of stuff caused by a gust of wind
My sister and I were at a pop up carnival when we were teens. We went on a Ferris wheel, and it started lightening. He would let people off as each set of seats went past him. Except us. He wouldn’t stop it at the bottom for us. He laughed everytime we went down and past him. We started yelling at him to let us off. He finally did after about 5 more times around. The thing was mad out of metal and was pretty tall, so we worried it would attract lightening to it. I found out later, many carnival workers are past convicts, that couldn’t get other jobs after they got out of prison. People let their kids go to carnivals alone.
What? I thought carnival workers needed a degree in engineering and extensive background checks. I always thought they just had terrible dental plans and too busy to properly bathe or do laundry.
I'm sorry to hear of your experience. As a former ferris wheel operator, you have to keep the wheel balanced at all times. You cannot load car after car because one side if the wheel will be too heavy and it won't turn or it could collapse. So if the wheel has 16 cars or tubs as they're called, you load 1 then 9 then 2 then 10 then 3 than 11 and so on. So yeah I have no doubt you were skipped over a few times and that the operator was laughing. He knew what you didn't! Lightning can strike those wheels while in motion and nobody would get electrocuted because they are completely safe in that regard. The reason the ferris wheels, especially the rim driven wheels do not operate in the rain is because the wheel can gain no traction and it will slide rather that turn.
@@jebuschrist9161are you joking? Carnies are some of the best and worst people ever! I was 18 operating a ferris wheel fir Crown Amusements and I had dropped out of school before that so no... you don't need any education or experience.
My son almost flew off a ride I was holding onto him for dear life. He was of the right weight and height according to their sign. Haven’t been to a carnival since
Carnival rides get safety checked (by the state and to ASTM regulations) before operating at any fair, the roller coaster was at a cedar fair park, they were following NC laws following inspection for metal fatigue and welding fatigue, nothing happened on the roller coaster, it was still safe to operate until they found the crack . the one where they got stuck upside down was due to getting emergency stopped (E-STOP) and not being able to resume properly. Don’t believe everything on the internet
@@HankMainWhoIsPrawnReady I do plenty of research, I am whats known as a 'Coaster Enthusiast', yes, still I dont know everything and I'm trying to learn more.
I've been to hundreds of these pop-up carnivals when I was a kid in the 80s & 90s. Nothing bad ever happened as far as I know. Back then, the carnival workers took pride in their engineering skills. Today, people just want a quick buck. They can care less about people's safety.
Our rides are inspected daily. We also are inspected by fire marshals before we open. We can not open a ride if they find an issue. We also have electrical inspections. Not every state, or traveling carnival, is held to these regulations. I would encourage people to do their own research in their area, so they know how it works.
I'm a Carney, we got inspected on a daily basis for reasons like this from happening. Also, when the sign says keep seated while the ride is in motion and the ride jock says not to stand up in ferris wheel seats gets ignored you are going to get hurt if not worse. And that's an amusement park ride.
Growing up going to fairs. My dad told me both rides because of safety. This was 80s and 90s. Still today I tell my kids no rides and if they listen we will pop in a trip to cedar point. The king of rides. It's worth it.
@@user-ro4jn3mu9tNone but before you jump straight to "Oh so exactly you can't be talking" I have to say you are literally the only amusment park worker I have seen say something like that, and I have heard from alot of others.
@@user-ro4jn3mu9t I agree, media does exaggerate alot. But I just can't really believe that carnival rides are safer than planted down theme park rides.
As a former carnival employee i can confirm that when i quit the rides hadnt been checked in almost a year by an inspector.. save up and go to your local theme park please its safer and better for your local economy 😊
Is the thing they keep showing as the crack on the Carowinds coaster the actual crack that was seen? I read in another comment that whats shown is actually part of the design, and that the actual crack found was somewhere else.
@@couchpotato4377the crack you see in the video is actually impeding the structural integrity of the ride. That beam is 30+ feet off the ground and is not even connected to the track. So yea.. I hope that tells you enough lol
Go to Disney parks and your chances of having an accident in a ride goes down to about 0.005% Not promoting Disney, but speaking the reality. Disney cannot afford accidents, and when one happens, they make sure to compensate the guests as good as possible in a discreet manner.
@@levithebaddest2369 well who could argue a case like yours with all your infinite wisdom. My 3 decades working in the industry tells me you're full of 💩💩💩
A customer of mine briefly worked for a carnival that did county fairs. He would tell anyone and everyone to never ever ever let your kids ride these rides.
I used to work for the fair/ carnival for 2 years all i have to say is there is always a 50/50% of you being safe and when when usually put up the eide we would half ass it cause we would be traveling and as soon as we get there we would put up the games a rides without a break so we be tired and rush it so we can get some rest so i advise yall to reconsider before you go to the fair/carnival cause your safety is not guaranteed thats why i quit stay safe out there people
Story 1.There is a mobile park in my country. A 5 year old girl was on a roller coaster and fell off. They did not click her in properly which made her fall off ( she was not that hurt) Story 2. I was on a Ferris wheel at a mobile carnival. The little thing you sit in was loose and creaky. I was sitting beside the door and there was 2 screws out of place 1 on the floor and 1 on the seat + the door was really loose and was closed with a loose chain. (I or my cousin was not hurt Pls like this took so long to write 😭
I was on that roller coaster w a crack in it when it happened. It was at caro winds in Charlotte, right after I got off it was closed off and I had no clue what happened until a week later. Scary.
I was too man. But B&M builds amazing coasters with a lot of systems in place in case of a failure. Even if that whole column fell the coaster would have kept going forwards and you would have been fine.
My mom used to know a guy who hangs out with the workers. They would play a game to see how many bolts they could take out before the machine beeped at them. Never use these always use the stable ones
I used to think as a kid my dad was cruel for never letting us go when it came to town, but I went as a teenager and was praying for my life. Those things are NOT safe. I like how they'd rather take a chance with a life than to check for safety.
@@Patexer yeah lol, why is the GP making such a big deal out of it? Like basically every video of an “accident” it shows the ride and its safety measures were designed well, in this case being able to operate completely fine with a support missing
⚠️ PLEASE READ!!! ⚠️ My great aunt and great uncle OWN and RUN a show. I know this from them. Our show carnival rides get safety checked EVERY SPOT. Whether it's in New York Or Georgia, they get safety checked EVERY time.They don't just not check the rides for a year straight. And, the 10 year old probably was not at height limit, or the child put their seatbelt on their own. You MUST wait until the carnival staff come to put your restraint on. The restraints are ALWAYS checked. Rides are safety checked every spot. THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME.
I want to believe you. I really do. This comment section is telling me something else entirely. Perhaps it is time for Federal inspectors to do weekly checks on the rides and if they are broken? They should get a RED TAG and hauled off to storage and fixed or scrapped.
@@christianfreedom-seeker934 when they do fail inspection, the ride gets torn down and another ride gets put up and it gets approved. So, believing this comment would be a good idea. ☺️
They are 170 times safer than your car. Last year, 3 people were killed on carnival rides, 17 on amusement park rides, 11,000 from gunshot wounds and 24,000 from car accidents. Get educated.
Thats not true.. there are state Inspectors that come to every town once show is set up.. same as a building inspection for permited work on your home..
I went to the one with the crack in it (the fury) at Carowinds and it is actually is really safe all the rides are safe and honestly a really good park and prolly my favorite
@@kenzbenz28rides at large amusement parks such as Carowinds (and by extent, other cedar fair owned parks as well) are inspected multiple times throughout the day to maintain ride safety and quality, in there case of Fury, the ride’s broken support beam was noticed and repaired the next day. To my knowledge if a coaster fails a critical safety test, it will be closed until it is repaired, the support beam in question was still mostly intact and was non critical.
@@kenzbenz28as well, the ride that got stuck upside down is NOT a roller coaster, it is a Larson “Ring of Fire” ride in which the ride car is propelled via the use of tires underneath the Center. The ride car itself is attached to the Center of the ride and does not ride on a track. In the case of a power failure, the car would be unable to move as it is not being regulated by gravity, which makes it not a proper roller coaster. Other than that Larson loopers tend to be cheaper rides at carnivals that re not well maintained, so I don’t think one getting stuck upside down like that was particularly surprising to me
@@kenzbenz28sorry if it’s long for you though, there are some common misconceptions about roller coasters and their operations, and I hope you’ve learned a little bit about that from my tangent here. P.s. I don’t mean to be rude with this, if it came off as rude then sorry, I merely wanted to post this for educational purposes
Used to work with a girl who worked a travelling "carnival/fairground" and she said she worked for a very good company that did full safety checks on every rife between every location but she said most locations were HORRIBLE. Most of the ride operators dont understand a lick of english and have been trained for maybe a couple hours. She said in her company the rides got checked 4 times total. Inspected before tearing them down, inspected once torn down and before driving. Then reinspection once arriving at the new location and inspected again once erected in the new location. I wouldnt chance it though. She only worked for one company.
I went to one of those with my mom and grandparents before and they had some like the Space Scrambler in Lagoon. While the ride was moving our door unlatched and my grandfather had to hold it closed for the duration of the ride. Told the person in control of the ride and I swear to god he looked at my Grandfather with an “oh well” type of expression. I highly doubt they fixed it before the next person got on.
Yeah I was a carni in Wyoming back a couple years ago when i was 18… those employees had more energy running through them, then the rides themselves lol…
That ride with the crack was at an amusement park called carowinds and I went there last summer after it was taken down. It’s called the fury 325 and it goes 325 ft high in the air. Stay safe lol
I witnessed a rides door on a childrens ride open while it was in motion. It was on a boat ride that goes back and forth and rotates in between glides. Myself and the mother of the kids screamed to stop the ride as the operator hadn't noticed. Thankfully the kids were ok and hung on as much as they could until it stopped. It could have been so much worse...needless to say the rest of the day was filled with anxiety.
It's not just small carnivals, I was at Disney World on their first reversible coaster, it stalled mid loop! We were upside down for only 15, 20 minutes, but that was uncomfortable enough to give me a horrible headache and swear off reversible coasters 4 life. Ruined my day, expensive headache. Another time at Bushe Gardens, rode their wooden roller coaster called the Gwanza. It was my young daughters 1rst coaster. She was violently thrown around to the point that I was holding her down as we shared the same safety bar. She was miserable and now hates coasters, my uncle who was also riding with us and has cerebal palsey ended up going to the hospital the next day with 2 cracked ribs, I still have a pinched nerve in my neck 10 years later...
I am an NDT technician for a roller coaster manufacturer and I can 9001% confirm that mobile “pop-up” carnivals and fairs aren’t held to the same standards as theme parks solely because they do not stay stationary for longer than 90 days Do NOT support pop up carnivals
Folks need to take this to heart! I took my girls to the West Virginia state fair a few years back when I was visiting my best friend who lived there, and there was one ride in particular that scared the life out me just watching it, it looked so unsafe. I wouldn't get on it, but my best friend did with one of my girls. Later on that day, the ride malfunctioned, and someone was thrown from it! It was one of those rides that looks like a bullet on a long arm and spins you about 150 ft in the air. The person lived, but they had several broken bones. My intuition was spot on that day. Don't let your kids get on these rides at carnivals, their life may depend on it!
My fiance gets upset sometimes when I tell her I refuse to go on certain if not all carnival rides or roller coasters for this very reason. It didn't seem that common growing up hearing about attraction accidents, but nowadays it's like I see one or two every month in the United States. I'm a big safety person so when someone asks me hey do you want to go on this ride and I look at it and I'm like if there's a chance it can throw me and kill me then no
Welder and fabricator here, just a few months on the job made carnival rides impossible for me. Sheer points, piss poor welds, it will terrify you if you have the technical knowledge
Fun fact. Most carnivals rides are decades old with low quality checks and poor/paid off inspections. Rare though are permanent amusement park incidents. Though it seems alot permanent amusement parks has to undergo several inspections and routine maintenance. Though it can still happen. Just dont trust carnivals. My cousin got a job helping them set up once in my home town and he told me that there were more than just a few rides missing parts. Ive never trusted one sents.
As a roller coaster enthusiast, PLEASE BLOW THIS COMMENT UP OR AT LEAST PIN IT BECAUSE PEOPLE NEED TO KNOW! Anyways, carnival rides the one year inspection is obviously terrible but, regular non traveling amusement parks are way safer because rides are inspected multiple times everyday to keep you safe. Carnivals though, very sketchy and they are traveling rides so they are poorly constructed. I don’t think spending the extra money is bad if you value your life. I can blabber your ears about safety on rides but that would be too long so I would recommend searching up “roller coaster safety” or maybe “flat ride safety” (flat rides are thrill rides that aren’t rides like roller coasters) but trust me regular non travelling amusement parks are wayyy safer.
As a fellow ce, thank you
@@Furyman325 ye
Ye
i loved how you watered down all of the terms for the gp 😂
@@Todd21212 yep gotta make sure not just the enthusiasts who are “far smarter than these average people” 🤓 know
I was trapped on the Top of a Ferris Wheel at 4 yrs old. It took 8 hours to get me down
It was extremely Traumatizing. I thank God my Aunt was on with me and was able to keep us both calm.
Safety Checks should be every time they set up and everyday they are operating.
Damn wtf that’s a whole school day
Not for me I never got stuck💀but I’m scared of heights😭😭
I would be bursting for the toilet lol
For sure a good thing your aunt was there because how crazy would it have been to let a 4 year old on an adult ride by herself.
Damn, thats like a whole 8 hours!
Bro has balls to be in a carnival after hours
He out there sabotaging the rides.
He probably work's for them.
It's only dangerous if the killer clowns see you. 🙄
Bro out here fighting the Joker.
which is why i dont get on those crazy rides.
I used to be a fireman, and whenever the carnival came to town for the 4-H fair we always inspected the rides. If they don't have a up-to-date inspection sticker on their ride we will not let them put it up until the state issued a permit
I’m supposed to go to the Woodstock fair tomorrow and all my 6 yo son wants to do is ride rides now… I’m actually terrified.. was already thinking about it then this pops up 😅
@@Kiq_Ash just look at the ride and see if it has a state certificate for the year that you go. They have to put the certificate where the public can see it and it has to be affixed to the ride
@@Kiq_AshJust go on the small rides not the big ones
@@johny11150 😁👍
Your locality is doing a great 👍 job! Unfortunately a lot of other places don't bother to check!
I loved my grandma. As a kid, she would keep us safe by being brutally honest. Every time we went to the carnival, she told us about the time the fireball ride got stuck upsidedown for hours. She also told us about the alien spaceship looking one (zero gravyity wall thing) scalped a girl with long hair while it was spinning. I dont know if the second one is real, but it always scared me to think about it because my hair was long at the time. Still don't go to the carnival.
The second one is actually real, if you ever wanna look into it the girl's name was Elizabeth Gilreath
Luckily she's doing a lot better now
Last time when I went to six flags there was a giant swing that make you go to 400 ft and when I was walking I saw that lot of people got stuck up there at 400 ft and my cousin hear them saying help me and I never going on that ride
Most of those rides are also stored outside during their off season causing them to internally rust
ive disassembled them an its crazy how they are put together and run.
Most are stored in dry states tho
@dakotahmoose1192 in the uk some traveling fairs are stored outside but under thick tarps. We have very stringent rules and saftey checks over here though and a very tightnit fairground community
สวัสดี เป็นอย่างไรบ้าง. ฉันออกจากความคิดเห็นนี้ด้วยเหตุผล
@@dakotahmoose1192there is a six flags in New Jersey! Definitely not a dry state! Very prone to rust.
Yea even though I never knew I always felt that it was unsafe.
Also third
The news kid fall of a rollcoaster goes in hospital
@@darijokorenov1864 yea
Rides are safe. The chance of dying is literally 1 in 750 million
I almost fell out of one of those ship rides once
Don't ever fall for this trap in the hood
Anywhere for that matter
Dude, an Ex of mine went on the carnival one that stayed up there for four hours. He said he was bout to die, all the blood just stayed in his head, and he couldn’t move at all. That stuff scary. Crazy how corrupt people will be for money.
couldnt they have firefighters use that massive ladder to get them down? why did it take so long?
I was one of the people on that fucking ride in Wisconsin. Worst day of my life.
ya okay bud
I’m not trying to be rude or whatever but the ride was only stopped due to emergency systems doing their jobs, so being stuck for so long would’ve likely been safer than the ride continuing. Still I understand how bad it is to be upside down for so long, but just know it was for your safety and things like that almost never happen
@@vitrickgoopbrother i have tracked you across youtube you have always said these stories are fake but now i have the upperhand if you look at the people listed in the incident report you can see this guys name checkmate
@@vitrickgoop”ya okay bud”-🤓🤡 head ahh dude
ya definitely
4 HOURS !!! That is such a long time I would probably pass out and get sick
If you normally sleep 8 hours a day that is 1/4 of your day wasted on that stupid ride
I was one of the people trapped on that ride. Worst day of my life. You don't know what your body and brain feels like after you've been left hanging upside down for just under four hours. I had a migraine for a week, and none of us were able to successfully sue the amusement park owner. Don't even ask me why.
@@ScottysHazebro jail for them
@@ScottysHazehow they get u down and why?
@@jif420I’m sorry but 4 hours = 1/4 day? bro trippin it should be 1/6. The math ain’t mathin’ 🤯
Thank You for putting awareness out there for this. 💯🙏🏼♥️
Nah bro, I was at a fair yesterday. RUclips definitely listening 💀💀💀
I was at a fair like one week ago RUclips is definitely listening-😭😭📸
jealous yalls fairs open up this early, mine opens at october 19th
FR LIKE I WENT TO THE FAIR 4 DAYS AGO
WTF I was just thinking about the fair, this shits reading my mind n sheet
I feel😅😮❤
Sadly The carnival accidents have gotten worse there’s literally been multiple serious accidents in last Month💔
& what are they? Or are you making up facts???
Recently there was one in Belgium.
@@jdvokinthis sounds like coping to me are you mad that your favorite mobile carnival might be dangerous
True, stay away. Our son was 9yo when he was thrown from a carnival ride and landed on concrete, lacerating his spleen. He spent 10 days in Providence Childrens Hospital, 5 of those days he wasnt able to eat and was only allowed ice chips to drink. Of course, doctor's had him on IV solution to maintain his hydration, but, nothing else, because, the doctor's feared he may need emergency surgery if his spleen ruptured. Fortunately, he survived and is now 34yo. Don't even think about filing a lawsuit, these gypsy carnivals are shifty and even a lawyer can't pin them down. We paid thousands in hospital bills from this incident. Don't risk your child's life, it definitely isn't worth it.
Canada healthcare is free
@@MZRNXDit was around 20 years ago
@@MZRNXDhow do u even know its canada
Canada is also communist
@@MZRNXDthe hospital is actually in Texas, not Canada. Providence≠Province 😂
ALSO i was used as an operator for a carnival ride and was only taught how to operate the ride a day before the event started. YOU ONLY HAVE to be 16 to be a ride operator and for most of these companies to allow you to work there you have to be at least 16. And most of the time they also have hired teens take it down when they leave town, its actually really bad
Yep I worked as a "Carney" for literally a single day and almost died from shit safety standards ... I noped out after they told me to scale a Farris wheel with a harness that was frayed and flat out missing important support eyelets
@@jamesprice2163 you people are so melodramatic.
@@FAFO4wisdom Alright then. You do it.
@@Just_a_Goth do what? Train people? I have, hundreds of them. Be a member of OABA and IAAPA? I have been for nearly 3 decades. I work ride maintenance and refurbishment, with multiple factories and manufacturers that trained me. I have gathered intelligence for ride accidents and investigations and am a contributor to the ride accidents database. What have YOU done?
@@jamesprice2163How long ago was this and how old where you
For as long as I've been to carnivals, whenever we're on the rides, we feel scared, horrified and have that feeling that we don’t feel safe sometimes even as a kid.
Yet Nothings happened, otherwise you would have said it in your comment so don't make stuff up now. Lmao
Its so rare that something happens lol ive been to hundreds and never had a problem
its like saying to never go in a car or go on a plane. sht happens, people die, stuff breaks down because its all man made and nothing lasts forever. you can stay curled up in a ball never living or having fun for the fear that you might get hurt. its rare that stuff breaks down to the point of causing serious injury
different strokes, not everybody has low self-preservation and we DEFINITELY aren't as cool as u. @arwen08
The good old Final Destination
oh hell no😂
That part
That park was hosted by a school I ain’t trusting that
The roller coaster in Charlotte, NC is The Fury at Carowinds. It’s a Gigacoaster. I loved that ride but it’s terrifying they let the damage get that far. The drop and speed on that coaster is crazy and there is a part where you go underground.
Your right.is it part 3?
I worked for the carnival in the 70's. If there's supposed to be 4 bolts, you're lucky if you've got two. Keep your kids off these death traps. ❤
That's awesome. But also, I blame whoever created the ride, had no clue or idea how the ride is suppose to be and have, not to mention the amount of people that one may even go through a serious death worser then everything I could think of.
@@average-art3222
They are so dangerous. I'm pretty sure it's not the manufacturer. All of that stems from lax carnival set up, and tear down ride workers, and lax ride inspectors. Losing bolts, and not caring to find them, or replace them.
Things are a bit different now. They actually have third party inspectors. They even wear uniform shirts now, so things are much more strict now. As it should be. In the 70's they were pretty much policing themselves. This is NEVER a good policy! Using an outside party to inspect their work, if nothing else, it keeps everybody honest. I haven't worked for the carnival since the early 80's. I'm sure things have to be better now, however, I still don't feel good about it. ❤
@@average-art3222 It's really not the manufacturer. It's the carnival. They're the ones that set up the rides, and tear them down. They didn't do a good job keeping bolts and other components separated. They just threw them in a box. The manufacturer wouldn't be responsible for keeping track of them. Once they're sold, the manufacturer is out of it. ❤
@@margiecook6879 the responsibility falls on YOU. if bolts are missing, go buy new ones, turn in the receipts and problem is solved. Don't wait for someone else to do it. Furthermore, didn't you say in another comment you only worked for one day? How do you know those bolts weren't replaced?
@margiecook6879 by your logic then you should keep kids away from cars and roads
This is why I’ve always told my wife I do not trust a ride that can be put up and disassembled in the same day lol
But you trust a ride sitting in the elements for 10+ years 👀
@@texasktea one that has regular inspections by on site staff, yes I do.
@@Ravenlocke118😂. Tool.
@@texasktea Yes, for the same reason I trust a skyscraper to not collapse when i'm on the top floor.
Because it's been built with the specific design to last.
You perfectly summed it up
FYI, MOST fairs have to inspect rides/concessions BEFORE the fair is operational. I traveled. My family traveled. Yeah sometimes things break down, kinda like airplanes and trains and cars.
Sometimes people die.😂
oh you traveled? Good for you. Whatever the fuck thats supposed to mean
exactly! people gotta live a little. you cant say to never drive or go on a plane because it might crash, sht happens. and yeah i agree they should do more to prevent it, but im gonna keep going on rides because its fun. our state fair does inspection daily before opening times, and an inspection 1 week before opening aswell (and the day before)
@@arwen08 all fun and games till u get thown off
@@justtrolling6160 oh well. i guess you shouldnt ride a car because you might crash and die. 🤷♀
I remember being traumazied at a very young age at a similar traveling Carnival ride in my area. I believe I was too small for the ride they put me on. It was dangerous. The seatbelt was too large and as I was spinning upside down, nothing was holding me in place. Be careful with your kids.
That happened to me too on that spider type ride. I was about 6 and definitely wasn't secured in that thing.
I live in Antioch, and I'm friends with the kids' older brother. Truly was a big predicament. Carnival left town during the night. We watched the last truck leave from my job.
In case you were wondering the song in the background is called " In a heartbeat " 28 days/weeks later soundtrack
THANK YOU
28 days later was an amazing movie
Well, as an ex worker in Australia (Ferris wheel and zipper) I can tell you legally crack testing is done every 2 years and random inspections are carried out multiple times throughout the year by operational health and safety. Now these guys don't always know what they're looking at, but definitely check things such as foundations and leads.
Sometimes things occur that cause a breakdown, for example an employee not checking the generator has sufficient fuel leading to power loss. Also in the case of Ferris wheels if they are overbalanced the ride may 'slip' causing it to spin uncontrolled until the heaviest point stops at the bottom. This can be scary for the passengers and workers alike, however you are safe in the cart granted you stay seated at all times.
Also if you have a heavy ride on soft ground or experience long heavy rain it is essential to check the levelling each morning to ensure the ride hasn't sunk at all into the ground.
I did that job for almost a decade and was very dedicated to safety, unfortunately with the nature of travel many casual employees just don't have that dedication.
Do you know if they safety check rides at the melbourne show¿
Idk about carnivals but the roller coaster one is at a Cedar Fair Park. That's the same company that owns Kings Island and Cedar Point. Each park in the chain is required to inspect every ride before it opens every day. Here in Ohio when something major happens the ride is shut down until the state can complete their investigation. Both major incidents that happened here in Ohio under Cedar Fair have resulted in one ride getting removed and another getting completely reprofiled by another manufacturer than the original one. That ride that was shown in the video is in Carolina. Depending on which side of the border that coaster is on, that state probably has the same regulations Ohio does. If not at least Cedar Fair does and they have a habit of fixing majorly broken rides or removing them. However, because they do such a good job of maintaining those rides it usually doesn't get to that point.
I would just like to add that from what I heard no one got hurt on that roller coaster. They shut down the ride immediately after they received word of the instant.
He's not talking about that, boss. He's talking about those carnivals that pop up in your suburban neighborhoods, run by carnies. I do believe..
By-the-way born and raised in Detroit Michigan and I didn't recognize cedar point which I've been to a million times good job
@@stacyjaye6350then why is 25% of the video a clip of Fury 325? Fury is a theme park rollercoaster, not a carnival ride
I'm from Michigan and Cedar Pointe and Kings Island were thee place to go in the midwest. respect
I have worked for the North American Midway which is the biggest, safest traveling carnival for 13 years and the biggest reason people get hurt on rides is cause the patron either takes their safety belt off or they dont listen to the ride operator. Its a one in a million chance for the ride to malfunction and hurt someone. The rides get inspected every single time they are set up and before open every day.
New fear unlocked:
*Rollercoster*
Go to Knobles they check their rides and roller-coasters every day. Knobles is also non-traviling. If you are really that scared now, I suggest camping by the twister and see how they do it. The amusement park opens at 12, so it gives them time to look through these things. When you warm up to this, I suggest checking out the Phoenix.
just avoid most carnival rides, other amusement parks are slightly safer but never be too sure
Same
That’s not a coaster and not how you spell it
Then you now have coasterphobia a fear of roller-coasters
I used to do security at afew of those carnivals, omg them rides r so rickety & shitty. And being there alone overnight was even creepier, and u hear ding ding ding!!!! Out of nowhere, or a ride starts moving, lol. Like a horror movie every time
Nah that ding ding ding would fuck my head up fr😭
@@jeromecastro3051especially what ride you heard and been told about, my god there are some rides that seemed to be so haunting.
Is anyone going to talk about the poor boy? I’m in tears, I really hope he’s okay. He has a full life ahead of him and he’s only 10!? I can’t imagine what he’s been through.
Edit: I’m aware of the reply’s that he lived. That relived me, but again, I know that he lived now. Thank you for the information.
Edit 2: war in the reply’s💀
Blud is crying over some random 10 yr old death☠️ nah bro; tons of ppl die everyday, I worked at a retirement home and seen ppl of ppl die at least once a month. It’s just death really 🤷♂️
@@MZRNXD no one cares? It’s literally a sad way to die. And what can I not feel bad for the poor kid? Hop off the internet and get a real life.
@@MZRNXDPeople at a retirement home already lived full lives.
This kid wasn't even half way through his K-12 days
@@MZRNXDblud lets be fr, if u were to die rn, from u saying this, nobody would care 😐
@@MZRNXDBro you have no soul. There is a difference between a 60-90 dying and a 10 year old dying
Bro that’s some final destination shit Fr
Exactly. I work for an amusement park, and multiple of our rides have been shut down because failure to check for safety belt. Employees being suspended for weeks because of it.
i hope he’s ok
4 hour what were the staff doing 💀
He forgor 💀💀💀
Man I use to work at these mobile carnivals especially the Wisconsin State Fair at West Allis on August 2011. So many dark secrets I discovered.
Including a corrupted governor who engineer its tragedy to get back in office.
@@AwesomeBlackDudeim from milwaukee wisconsin ive never heard of what you said fill me in?
@@AwesomeBlackDudegive us the tea
The staff was checking their IG feed and Snapchat and Tik Tok. Recording a video of it and showing people that they were there. Lol
There needs to be more regulation on carnival rides or they should be banned all together. I’ve seen way too many rides falling apart due to their poor maintenance/management
Yeah let's ban everything reeeee
What country do you live in?
Yeah I quit going to those long ago!!!! Can't stand those kinda spin and puke rides
This is why you go to places like Canada’s Wonderland or Six Flags
Cedar point too they have had like only 1 death and it was because he was entering a restricted area
Busch gardens
@@Captainrex5741 On May 24, 1984, a 5-year-old boy riding Cedar Creek Mine Ride suffered a fractured skull and bruises after falling from the train's front seat
And alot of stuff caused by a gust of wind
@@Brtt4849 that has nothing to do with my point
Guess what? Accidents happen at theme parks too
First we have off brand toys, now we have off brand carnivals.
My sister and I were at a pop up carnival when we were teens. We went on a Ferris wheel, and it started lightening. He would let people off as each set of seats went past him. Except us. He wouldn’t stop it at the bottom for us. He laughed everytime we went down and past him. We started yelling at him to let us off. He finally did after about 5 more times around. The thing was mad out of metal and was pretty tall, so we worried it would attract lightening to it. I found out later, many carnival workers are past convicts, that couldn’t get other jobs after they got out of prison. People let their kids go to carnivals alone.
Cap as hell
What?
I thought carnival workers needed a degree in engineering and extensive background checks.
I always thought they just had terrible dental plans and too busy to properly bathe or do laundry.
I'm sorry to hear of your experience. As a former ferris wheel operator, you have to keep the wheel balanced at all times. You cannot load car after car because one side if the wheel will be too heavy and it won't turn or it could collapse. So if the wheel has 16 cars or tubs as they're called, you load 1 then 9 then 2 then 10 then 3 than 11 and so on. So yeah I have no doubt you were skipped over a few times and that the operator was laughing.
He knew what you didn't! Lightning can strike those wheels while in motion and nobody would get electrocuted because they are completely safe in that regard. The reason the ferris wheels, especially the rim driven wheels do not operate in the rain is because the wheel can gain no traction and it will slide rather that turn.
@@jebuschrist9161are you joking? Carnies are some of the best and worst people ever! I was 18 operating a ferris wheel fir Crown Amusements and I had dropped out of school before that so no... you don't need any education or experience.
That's very deep and concerning!!!!!
Big difference between carnival rides and amusement parks. When I used to work for carnivals we had to check daily
My son almost flew off a ride I was holding onto him for dear life. He was of the right weight and height according to their sign. Haven’t been to a carnival since
Carnival rides get safety checked (by the state and to ASTM regulations) before operating at any fair, the roller coaster was at a cedar fair park, they were following NC laws following inspection for metal fatigue and welding fatigue, nothing happened on the roller coaster, it was still safe to operate until they found the crack . the one where they got stuck upside down was due to getting emergency stopped (E-STOP) and not being able to resume properly. Don’t believe everything on the internet
Yeah this guy is just rage-baiting without doing research :/
@@HankMainWhoIsPrawnReady I do plenty of research, I am whats known as a 'Coaster Enthusiast', yes, still I dont know everything and I'm trying to learn more.
I've been to hundreds of these pop-up carnivals when I was a kid in the 80s & 90s. Nothing bad ever happened as far as I know. Back then, the carnival workers took pride in their engineering skills. Today, people just want a quick buck. They can care less about people's safety.
My prayers go out to the young man who got hurt and his family. God please watch over the young man😔🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽
we haven’t appeased the final destination 3 gods enough we need a sacrifice
Our rides are inspected daily. We also are inspected by fire marshals before we open. We can not open a ride if they find an issue. We also have electrical inspections.
Not every state, or traveling carnival, is held to these regulations.
I would encourage people to do their own research in their area, so they know how it works.
That's how it is in Connecticut as well
I'm a Carney, we got inspected on a daily basis for reasons like this from happening. Also, when the sign says keep seated while the ride is in motion and the ride jock says not to stand up in ferris wheel seats gets ignored you are going to get hurt if not worse. And that's an amusement park ride.
@@shawnhopkinson2032Connecticut ❤
Someone just fell through a waterside at a park where I live. The man is currently on life support.
Holy hell Holly lol.
You got me damned if you think I'm getting on that thing. 🤣 I've seen final destination 3 okay 😂😂😂😂
I hope everything is okay 🙏❤ This is so upsetting 😢😢
Growing up going to fairs. My dad told me both rides because of safety. This was 80s and 90s. Still today I tell my kids no rides and if they listen we will pop in a trip to cedar point. The king of rides. It's worth it.
How did auto correct get both from stay off. 🤔
My church has a mobile ride carnival every year and I refuse to go on them.
@@user-ro4jn3mu9tbud I think you switched it around 💀
@@user-ro4jn3mu9tNone but before you jump straight to "Oh so exactly you can't be talking" I have to say you are literally the only amusment park worker I have seen say something like that, and I have heard from alot of others.
@@user-ro4jn3mu9t I agree, media does exaggerate alot. But I just can't really believe that carnival rides are safer than planted down theme park rides.
you coaster enthusiasts people seem cool asf 💪🏽
Thanks man, I will remember that compliment for the rest of my life.
Ty Ty, bringin in all that info for those who need it 💪💪💪
Indeed we are
As a former carnival employee i can confirm that when i quit the rides hadnt been checked in almost a year by an inspector.. save up and go to your local theme park please its safer and better for your local economy 😊
Man I’m glad they fixed Carowinds that stuff was crazy
bro i was there a week before they closed down the ride. crazy as hell💀
Is the thing they keep showing as the crack on the Carowinds coaster the actual crack that was seen? I read in another comment that whats shown is actually part of the design, and that the actual crack found was somewhere else.
@@couchpotato4377the crack you see in the video is actually impeding the structural integrity of the ride. That beam is 30+ feet off the ground and is not even connected to the track. So yea.. I hope that tells you enough lol
“People were trapped upside down”
Final Destination is becoming real life…
Go to Disney parks and your chances of having an accident in a ride goes down to about 0.005%
Not promoting Disney, but speaking the reality. Disney cannot afford accidents, and when one happens, they make sure to compensate the guests as good as possible in a discreet manner.
My grandma used to say to never get on rides that are taken apart and put back together. I never have, never will.
They are far safer than ones that arent ever disassembled.
@@FAFO4wisdomnahhh
@@levithebaddest2369 well who could argue a case like yours with all your infinite wisdom. My 3 decades working in the industry tells me you're full of 💩💩💩
A customer of mine briefly worked for a carnival that did county fairs. He would tell anyone and everyone to never ever ever let your kids ride these rides.
do we need merch that says “don’t ever fall for this trap in the hood”? 😂
lol yes
😂😂
The goat replied
I used to work for the fair/ carnival for 2 years all i have to say is there is always a 50/50% of you being safe and when when usually put up the eide we would half ass it cause we would be traveling and as soon as we get there we would put up the games a rides without a break so we be tired and rush it so we can get some rest so i advise yall to reconsider before you go to the fair/carnival cause your safety is not guaranteed thats why i quit stay safe out there people
Story 1.There is a mobile park in my country. A 5 year old girl was on a roller coaster and fell off. They did not click her in properly which made her fall off ( she was not that hurt)
Story 2. I was on a Ferris wheel at a mobile carnival. The little thing you sit in was loose and creaky. I was sitting beside the door and there was 2 screws out of place 1 on the floor and 1 on the seat + the door was really loose and was closed with a loose chain. (I or my cousin was not hurt
Pls like this took so long to write 😭
I was on that roller coaster w a crack in it when it happened. It was at caro winds in Charlotte, right after I got off it was closed off and I had no clue what happened until a week later. Scary.
NAW ( ;∀;)
I was too man. But B&M builds amazing coasters with a lot of systems in place in case of a failure. Even if that whole column fell the coaster would have kept going forwards and you would have been fine.
Nothing would’ve happened. It’s B&M.
I live therw
@@treattep
How do you know?
😔🙏🏾prayers for lil bro
Dawg ain’t no way. I live in Wisconsin and I went on that ride no joke💀
Same was it the kenosha county fair or racine county fair
My mom used to know a guy who hangs out with the workers. They would play a game to see how many bolts they could take out before the machine beeped at them. Never use these always use the stable ones
I used to think as a kid my dad was cruel for never letting us go when it came to town, but I went as a teenager and was praying for my life. Those things are NOT safe. I like how they'd rather take a chance with a life than to check for safety.
Fury crack isn’t a big deal
Yeah, it was literally designed to operate safely without that support
And he said it was moments b4 disaster hit nothing happend
@@zacrev0 no disaster would have happened if it kept running
@@Patexer fr
@@Patexer yeah lol, why is the GP making such a big deal out of it? Like basically every video of an “accident” it shows the ride and its safety measures were designed well, in this case being able to operate completely fine with a support missing
⚠️ PLEASE READ!!! ⚠️
My great aunt and great uncle OWN and RUN a show. I know this from them. Our show carnival rides get safety checked EVERY SPOT. Whether it's in New York Or Georgia, they get safety checked EVERY time.They don't just not check the rides for a year straight. And, the 10 year old probably was not at height limit, or the child put their seatbelt on their own. You MUST wait until the carnival staff come to put your restraint on. The restraints are ALWAYS checked. Rides are safety checked every spot. THANK YOU FOR YOUR TIME.
I want to believe you. I really do. This comment section is telling me something else entirely. Perhaps it is time for Federal inspectors to do weekly checks on the rides and if they are broken? They should get a RED TAG and hauled off to storage and fixed or scrapped.
@@christianfreedom-seeker934 when they do fail inspection, the ride gets torn down and another ride gets put up and it gets approved. So, believing this comment would be a good idea. ☺️
New fear unlocked:
And this is why I never let my kids go on rides at the fair. 💯 Absolutely dangerous!
They are 170 times safer than your car. Last year, 3 people were killed on carnival rides, 17 on amusement park rides, 11,000 from gunshot wounds and 24,000 from car accidents.
Get educated.
shows how much human life is worth
Thats not true.. there are state Inspectors that come to every town once show is set up.. same as a building inspection for permited work on your home..
Htf is not true when you got visual evidence. SMH, they ain't doing their job if they are inspecting, and people see shit like this
I went to the one with the crack in it (the fury) at Carowinds and it is actually is really safe all the rides are safe and honestly a really good park and prolly my favorite
Yeah they are but they are getting old so it’s not as safe as it once was and they only check the rides for safety about every 3 months
@@kenzbenz28rides at large amusement parks such as Carowinds (and by extent, other cedar fair owned parks as well) are inspected multiple times throughout the day to maintain ride safety and quality, in there case of Fury, the ride’s broken support beam was noticed and repaired the next day. To my knowledge if a coaster fails a critical safety test, it will be closed until it is repaired, the support beam in question was still mostly intact and was non critical.
@@kenzbenz28as well, the ride that got stuck upside down is NOT a roller coaster, it is a Larson “Ring of Fire” ride in which the ride car is propelled via the use of tires underneath the Center. The ride car itself is attached to the Center of the ride and does not ride on a track. In the case of a power failure, the car would be unable to move as it is not being regulated by gravity, which makes it not a proper roller coaster.
Other than that Larson loopers tend to be cheaper rides at carnivals that re not well maintained, so I don’t think one getting stuck upside down like that was particularly surprising to me
@@kenzbenz28sorry if it’s long for you though, there are some common misconceptions about roller coasters and their operations, and I hope you’ve learned a little bit about that from my tangent here.
P.s. I don’t mean to be rude with this, if it came off as rude then sorry, I merely wanted to post this for educational purposes
@@kenzbenz28 At Carowinds they run each ride 10 times before operning
Used to work with a girl who worked a travelling "carnival/fairground" and she said she worked for a very good company that did full safety checks on every rife between every location but she said most locations were HORRIBLE. Most of the ride operators dont understand a lick of english and have been trained for maybe a couple hours. She said in her company the rides got checked 4 times total. Inspected before tearing them down, inspected once torn down and before driving. Then reinspection once arriving at the new location and inspected again once erected in the new location. I wouldnt chance it though. She only worked for one company.
I went to one of those with my mom and grandparents before and they had some like the Space Scrambler in Lagoon. While the ride was moving our door unlatched and my grandfather had to hold it closed for the duration of the ride. Told the person in control of the ride and I swear to god he looked at my Grandfather with an “oh well” type of expression. I highly doubt they fixed it before the next person got on.
I always go to lagoon now I’ll never go to that ride thank you 🥲✌️
@@pablo29071 I’m sorry. 😅 I didn’t mean to unlocked any fears in anyone. 😭
Yeah I was a carni in Wyoming back a couple years ago when i was 18… those employees had more energy running through them, then the rides themselves lol…
Bro i went to one yesterday 💀 😭
Same 😭😭😭
Be careful guys
That ride with the crack was at an amusement park called carowinds and I went there last summer after it was taken down. It’s called the fury 325 and it goes 325 ft high in the air. Stay safe lol
Let’s go to the carnival they said nothing bad would happen they said🗿.
Shut up 😂
Lmao but DW theme parks/amusement parks are good
I witnessed a rides door on a childrens ride open while it was in motion. It was on a boat ride that goes back and forth and rotates in between glides. Myself and the mother of the kids screamed to stop the ride as the operator hadn't noticed. Thankfully the kids were ok and hung on as much as they could until it stopped. It could have been so much worse...needless to say the rest of the day was filled with anxiety.
For real last time I went I road that rocking boat and the bar did not lock so you had to hold it down luckily I did not fall out.
The Batman ride from six flags kindom is crazy
Ah shi, I knew there was something fishy about that Arizona State Fair 🥶
Lol I'm in Arizona
What’s the song name?
I don't remember specifically if this is I heard the song from but it's from the movies 28 Days Later
@@lilcrazy3170 oh ok thanks for trying
In the house, in a heartbeat by John Murphy. It is from 28 days later, the movie is incredible.
@@mrbaker7614 ok thank you
It's not just small carnivals, I was at Disney World on their first reversible coaster, it stalled mid loop! We were upside down for only 15, 20 minutes, but that was uncomfortable enough to give me a horrible headache and swear off reversible coasters 4 life. Ruined my day, expensive headache. Another time at Bushe Gardens, rode their wooden roller coaster called the Gwanza. It was my young daughters 1rst coaster. She was violently thrown around to the point that I was holding her down as we shared the same safety bar. She was miserable and now hates coasters, my uncle who was also riding with us and has cerebal palsey ended up going to the hospital the next day with 2 cracked ribs, I still have a pinched nerve in my neck 10 years later...
SO TRUE! I'm scared of riding any ride at a mobile carnival. 😢
Yo bro Mississippi carnival they got theirs checked bro trust, they might be a lil ghetto but they fun
Man, props to the people who waited 4 hours stuck upside down! 👏 👏 👏 👏
My parent NEVER let us go on carnival rides for this exact reason. Luckily we lived 20 mins from 6 Flags so we’d get season passes there.
More people are killed at 17 Six Flags parks every year than at over 600 carnivals in North America. You people know NOTHING.
I am an NDT technician for a roller coaster manufacturer and I can 9001% confirm that mobile “pop-up” carnivals and fairs aren’t held to the same standards as theme parks solely because they do not stay stationary for longer than 90 days
Do NOT support pop up carnivals
Folks need to take this to heart! I took my girls to the West Virginia state fair a few years back when I was visiting my best friend who lived there, and there was one ride in particular that scared the life out me just watching it, it looked so unsafe. I wouldn't get on it, but my best friend did with one of my girls. Later on that day, the ride malfunctioned, and someone was thrown from it! It was one of those rides that looks like a bullet on a long arm and spins you about 150 ft in the air. The person lived, but they had several broken bones. My intuition was spot on that day. Don't let your kids get on these rides at carnivals, their life may depend on it!
I can’t even have fun that much because I’m still traumatized from all the final destination movies 😂😂
I took my daughter to one she's small to begin with well after the ride she told me she held on for dear life. Last time we ever went.
Former Carney here. Absolutely true.
The loop ride reminds me of peter griffin meg dont drink that soda 😂...
That crack is terrifying, they are supposed to have electrodes that detect damage like that
My fiance gets upset sometimes when I tell her I refuse to go on certain if not all carnival rides or roller coasters for this very reason. It didn't seem that common growing up hearing about attraction accidents, but nowadays it's like I see one or two every month in the United States. I'm a big safety person so when someone asks me hey do you want to go on this ride and I look at it and I'm like if there's a chance it can throw me and kill me then no
Welder and fabricator here, just a few months on the job made carnival rides impossible for me. Sheer points, piss poor welds, it will terrify you if you have the technical knowledge
New fear unlocked: carnival rides
In germany we say: Tüv regelt 😂
Fun fact. Most carnivals rides are decades old with low quality checks and poor/paid off inspections. Rare though are permanent amusement park incidents. Though it seems alot permanent amusement parks has to undergo several inspections and routine maintenance. Though it can still happen. Just dont trust carnivals. My cousin got a job helping them set up once in my home town and he told me that there were more than just a few rides missing parts. Ive never trusted one sents.
Growing up my neighbors dad worked at a carnival and he wont go near a carnival ride because HE KNOWS THE REALITY of the industry!