Orlando, Fla. – Visitors to the Epic Universe appeared on Saturday afternoon in the entertainment park, hoping for the renovation of Stardust Racers.
It would be the first day when the exciting ride was accessible to the public since the man died on September 17, after the ride.
Universal Orlando Resort announced a move on Friday afternoon, saying he had worked with local and state officials to monitor attraction tests. The company said the Ride System manufacturer and the tray engineering expert conducted its exams that confirmed Universal’s findings.
On Saturday morning, both sides of Dueling Coaster were launched at their pace – sometimes empty, sometimes with universal staff on board. Epic workers told passersby that the ride would be expected to be reached until late afternoon or early evening.
The guests were finally allowed to take care of 6 pm, but the fire alarm in the park again delayed the process. 6:45 p.m. The first full day trains started. It was planned to close at 22 hours in the park.
Jared Ream, a tray enthusiast with tattoos to prove it, waited for a nearby Metteor Astropub restaurant in the indoor yard. Saturday was the last day of vacation trying to get on the ship in Deiton, Ohio, Ohio, in Ohio.
“I would say that it is probably the safest time to ever drive this ride at the moment because you have drawn all your eyes and attention,” Ram said. “So you all checked how to open it well.”
Universal did not allow people on Saturday to go queue until they sent a message through their program. Periodic rains – something that stops driving under normal circumstances – added a question mark to the wait.
32 -year -old Kevin Rodriguez Zavala died after the Stardust Racers unconscious, a thrilling ride that moves at a speed of 62 miles per hour, goes through a few launch and includes inversion. The Orange District Medical Expert decided to random death and the result of “multimedia jaw injuries”.
Lawyer Ben Crump, representing the Zavala family, said on Friday it was too early to renew the hill activities.
“Stardust Racers is a proof during the active death investigation,” Crump said in a press release.
Ram, who said he lost 140 pounds to ride a tray, disagreed.
“I would say that the only reason they closed for so long were disregarded by family and research,” he said. “They could open it earlier, but they didn’t.”
The ride made his debut on May 22. Together with the Epic Universe, the first amusement park opened in Orland for more than 25 years. Universal officials said details of driving and safety guidelines are in every attraction, in rows and in its program.
“Safety, as always, is our top priority,” said Karen Irwin, president of Universal Orlando Resort.
Lisa Lohmueller, who lives in Pittsburgh and visited Epic Universe with her husband Josh for the first time, said he was surprised to open the ride again.
“I think this is the amount of information they have around everything they can call,” she said.
Lohmueller, who said she had a heartache for the Zavala family, noted the driving intensity-and a long waiting option-was more committed than protective problems.
“It looks like this is a great-looking ride,” she said. “And honestly, if you were similar to which of the runs would have been related to mortality, I would not have guessed this.”