Tag Archives: Rides

Cedar Point launches new mobile website and app

Cedar Point Press Release

SANDUSKY, Ohio – A trip to Cedar Point just got a whole lot easier as the Sandusky, Ohio, amusement park/resort has two new ways to help guests with a need to know. Cedar Point has recently launched a new and improved mobile website and an iPhone and Android app.

The Cedar Point MyPark™ App, available as a free download on iPhone- and Android-powered mobile phones, is the ideal tool to plan a trip and save time during a visit to the park. Users will be able to immediately find live shows and food outlets, plus restrooms, ATMs and lockers. The app will feature a map of the park and will designate the user’s location. As the guest moves, their location will change on the park map, taking advantage of the smartphones’ GPS location technology.

Mobile App Homescreen Mobile App Millennium Force

The new mobile website, found at mypark.cedarpoint.com, streamlines information on the full version of the website and caters to guests’ information needs whether they are inside or outside the park. Guests can easily find directions to the park, pricing information or check the day’s special activities and more.

“As mobile technologies have improved, more and more of our guests are using their phones to access information about the park. It was important to make sure they had a convenient and effective way to find the information they need, said Rebecca Baker, Cedar Point’s interactive marketing coordinator. “With the new mobile website and smartphone app, we have made it easier to find information, save time and make their visit to the park more enjoyable.”

Other features of the new app include a “Friend Finder” that will help guests locate other members of their party. There is also a listing of food menus and live show schedules. Users will also be able to purchase tickets and/or season passes or make reservations for overnight accommodations at a Cedar Point Resort Property.

The app will be useful to guests even after the park closes for the night. They can use the app to mark their car when they arrive and then can easily locate it at the end of the day.

Both the app and the new mobile website will also allow users to interact with Cedar Point through social media. They can connect to the user’s Facebook and/or Twitter accounts to send instant posts or photos and “like” Cedar Point rides. Guests can also instantly read Cedar Point’s posts tweets and blogs directly.

Information and photographs of the park’s rides are also available on both the app and mobile website.

For more information about the Cedar Point MyPark App, please visit cedarpoint.com or www.facebook.com/cedarpoint.

Is Cedar Point still America’s Roller Coast?

From the Sandusky Register

Cedar Point Skyline

SANDUKSY

A Six Flags park in California is the new roller coaster champion, but Cedar Point officials say the rival park wears a tarnished crown.

Cedar Point says the park’s Superman: Escape from Krypton ride isn’t a roller coaster, and it shouldn’t be counted as such.

The Sandusky Register interviewed three roller coaster buffs, all of whom disagree with Cedar Point — they say Escape from Krypton is a legitimate roller coaster.

Last month Six Flags Magic Mountain in Los Angeles announced that with the opening of its newest ride, Green Lantern: First Flight, the park now has 18 roller coasters.

That surpasses Cedar Point’s 17.

But Cedar Point spokesman Robin Innes says Six Flags is stretching the definition of “roller coaster” when it includes Superman: Escape from Krypton.

According to the ride’s official website, Escape from Krypton blasts riders along an L-shaped track that extends 415 feet into the air, giving them 6.5 seconds of weightlessness and plummeting them back to earth in a free fall.

It describes the ride as a “dual-track coaster.”

But the ride resembles Cedar Point’s Power Tower, Innes said, which lifts riders straight into the air.
Cedar Point does not include Power Tower among its official list of 17 coasters.

Escape from Krypton also resembles Demon Drop, a former Cedar Point ride. Referring to Six Flags’ Escape from Krypton, Innes said, “We would call it a free-fall ride.”

Innes also said the quality of Cedar Point’s coasters is second to none.
Six Flags, meanwhile, isn’t jumping into the fray.

A spokeswoman for Six Flags Magic Mountain, Sue Carpenter, did not return phone messages a Register reporter left Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.

Still, roller coaster enthusiasts and people unaffiliated with the theme parks say it’s reasonable to classify Superman: Escape from Krypton as a roller coaster.

Cedar Point’s New WindSeeker Swing Ride Opens for the Summer!

Cedar Point Press Release

SANDUSKY, Ohio – Cedar Point’s WindSeeker towering swing is now open!

The 301-foot-tall WindSeeker, the newest ride at the Sandusky, Ohio, amusement park/resort, opened for the season yesterday, Tuesday, June 14.

It is receiving rave reviews. Riders are clapping and cheering as they descend the tower to the ground.

“It was awesome. It goes so high,” said Abbey Decker, an 11-year-old from Oak Harbor, Ohio. “I never knew Lake Erie was so big!”

Bordering the Cedar Point Beach, riders on the WindSeeker are treated to dramatic views of Cedar Point, Lake Erie and the Cedar Point Beach. On WindSeeker, riders sit in open two-passenger swings with their feet dangling in the breeze. The swings rotate around the 30-story center column as they slowly ascend the tower. At the top, riders are nearly face-to-face with the very top of the Power Tower and almost as high as the first hill of the Millennium Force roller coaster. (Guests must be at least 52 inches tall to ride WindSeeker.)

According to Cheryll McCarty, 40, from Bay Village, Ohio, “It is the best. The view was beautiful. I felt like I was on top of the world.”

With the opening of WindSeeker, Cedar Point now has 75 rides, including 17 roller coasters, more rides than any park in the world.

In addition to WindSeeker, the park has recently opened several new live shows for the season. This summer’s new offerings range from country favorites to classic rock and a gravity-defying stunt show with rollerbladers and skateboarders. An ice-skating show featuring Snoopy and the Gang opened over the weekend.

Earlier this month, American Portrait, Cedar Point’s new nighttime show, opened for the summer. Sponsored by the Marathon Petroleum Company LP, American Portrait features patriotic music, high-def images and colorful pyrotechnics that illuminate the evening sky.

To save money on a visit to Cedar Point, the park has a variety of money-saving deals that are available online at cedarpoint.com. Even more savings are available to guests who stay at one of the park’s resort properties. Resort guests also qualify for Early Entry and can enter the park one hour before it opens to the public.

For more information about WindSeeker and Cedar Point, please visit cedarpoint.com or call the park’s General Information Line at 419.627.2350.

 

Cedar Point’s WindSeeker takes flight

From the Sandusky Register

WindSeeker Ribbon Cutting
SANDUSKY

Cedar Point finally launched WindSeeker, giving thrill seekers the ride 301 feet above Lake Erie they’ve been waiting for.

The first batch of riders rode up into the sky at 8:10 p.m. Tuesday.

Two season pass holders from the Toledo area were the first in line. Jordan Jacobsen, 21, and Sarah Pietras, 19, rode side by side in one of the 32 pairs of seats that swing around the ride’s tower.

“Exciting. Great view. Amazing view of this park,” Jacobsen said. “Pretty windy up there. Definitely if you’re seeking wind, you’re getting it. Not much of a thrill. Much more of a view. Still exciting.”

“It was amazing,” Pietras said.

It appeared to spectators below that as the riders neared the top, the seats swung farther out.

“The farther up you get, you go sideways more,” Pietras confirmed. “I was a little scared.”

Cedar Point had hoped to launch the ride on opening day, May 14. Bad weather delayed construction, and mechanical bugs that park officials didn’t discuss also slowed the launch.

“Start the season,” Cedar Fair president and CEO Dick Kinzel said after he and Cedar Point general manager John Hildebrandt cut a ribbon to officially open the ride, shortly after park employees rode it to give it a final test.

“Better late than never. We’re ready to go,” said Kinzel, who is retiring at the end of the year and who drew cheers when he spoke at the park’s Coastermania event earlier this month. “It’s been a long grind. We appreciate the patience the public has had with it.”

Pictures from the OnPoint! Cedar Point Blog

Cedar Point’s WildCat reopens

From the Sandusky Register

WildCat Closed

SANDUSKY

Cedar Point officials have confirmed the WildCat reopened at noon today after the park’s staff made adjustments to the braking system.

“What we did after it closed on Sunday was a complete evaluation of the ride’s operating system,” Cedar Point spokesman Robin Innes said.

A four-person car on the ride failed to stop as it came into the loading station at 5 p.m. Sunday.

The brakes on the ride have been adjusted and inspected, Innes said. The ride was reinspected and tested against today before reopening, he said.

INCIDENT STORY

Cedar Point put the WildCat back in its cage until the park can figure out if it’s still tame.

One of the WildCat’s four-person cars crashed into a stopped car at the loading station at about 5 p.m. Sunday, leaving seven riders with bumps and bruises. No one suffered serious injuries, said Robin Innes, Cedar Point spokesman.

Park operators still chose to shut down the WildCat until they can make sure it’s safe, Innes said.
The moving car was carrying four people when it ran into the stopped car.

“We transferred seven people to our first-aid station for examination and treatment for bumps and bruises,” Innes said.

Four people left the first-aid station without further treatment, while Cedar Point took the other three to Firelands Regional Medical Center as a precaution. The three received treatment but were not admitted to the hospital, Innes said.

One of the three was met at the hospital by her parents, at which point she apparently called it a night and went home.

The other two returned to Cedar Point. They mentioned they were hungry, so park employees gave them French fries and drinks, Innes said.

Cedar Point told the U.S. Department of Agriculture — which regulates amusement rides — about what happened, said Erica Pitchford, a USDA spokeswoman.

Because the riders weren’t actually admitted to the hospital, the crash was considered an “incident,” Pitchford said.

If anyone had been admitted to the hospital, it would have been classified as an “accident” and Cedar Point would have been required to file a report.

Lamont Burnett, 32, of Detroit, Mich., walked by the silent ride Monday afternoon and learned it was closed.

“I was going to get on it,” said Burnett, who remembered riding it when he was a kid. He had hoped to get his sons, ages 11 and 12, on the WildCat as a relatively tame introduction to the wild world of roller coasters.

But the WildCat has been a wild ride more than once.

On May 16, 2008, a WildCat car traveling up a hill didn’t make it all the way, and instead rolled backward and hit the car behind it. Nine people were injured, eight of whom were treated at the park’s first-aid station.

The ninth person was taken to the hospital, treated and released.

After that, Cedar Point closed the ride for a month, reopening it only after replacing a section of track. Cedar Point has operated two identical WildCat rides since 1970, using one to replace the other.

Like all Cedar Point rides, WildCat still has an impressive record: Since 1970, more than 26 million people have enjoyed it without any problems.

During the last three summers, more than 300,000 people rode it.

By comparison, more than a million people rode eight of the most popular roller coasters at the park.
Park officials have other challenges on their plate still — they continue trying to get WindSeeker going.

As of Monday, training for WindSeeker crews hadn’t started yet, Innes said.

Cedar Point has yet to ask the Department of Agriculture to inspect WindSeeker, a necessary step in getting the ride licensed, Pitchford said.

LaGrange residents Michael Gaydles, 18, and Jeff Wirth, 18, both season pass holders, stood next to WindSeeker on Monday, gazing up at the towering beast.

Gaydles said he’s anxious to ride it because it’s so tall and it’ll swing riders out over the lake.
As Innes walked near WindSeeker, park visitors stopped him again and again to ask about it.

Innes told all of them the ride will be running “as soon as possible.”

“We have a lot of people anxious to ride it,” Innes said. “We’re anxious to get it open.”