Build Your Own Carnival Ride
SoCalChris writes "Check out these guys who are building their own dark ride similar to the ones found at carnivals and theme parks. The ride is complete with PLC's in each of the cars, and one more PLC for the entire ride. The ride also features a blocking system like professionally built rides."
Arghhh, slashdotted, yet there is a Hope!
Google's Cach
.noitacidem deen uoy siht daer nac uoy fI
I'm really tired of people getting the plural form of every abbreviation wrong. It's PLCs. Not PLC's. The PLC doesn't own anything. You wouldn't say "programmable logic controller's". Uhg.
spacefem.com
Visit here
The Dark Ride and Funhouse historical Society
"Anybody who tells me I can't use a program because it's not open source, go suck on rms. I'm not interested." (LT 2004)
Only 5 replies and the darn URLs been /.ed!
: www.phantasmechanics.com/darkride/+&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
I don't, but my friend Google does:
http://216.239.35.100/search?q=cache:j8SrIlANLtUC
Google will give you thumbnails.
-Peter
All I'm missing is the last file, drvplan.jpg, but here you go anyway: http://www.osuweb.net/~ahaning/www.phantasmechanic s.com/darkride/
*ahaning throws the URL at the rabid users and gets out of the way as quickly as possible... as if feeding starved dogs*
Withdrawal before climax is very ineffective and those who try this are usually called "parents."
I grabbed what I could, but the site was in the middle of a meltdown.
.ZIP file, or the .BZ file.
Grab the
Jouster
From the second page of the article:
If you are going to do something like this, please invest in a decent tool. EMCO machine tools are the sorriest pieces of crap you can find. Look at a used machinery auction and buy a good Clausing-Colchester lathe and a Bridgeport or Lagun milling machine.As another alternative; if you're going to drop this much money on buying machine tools, just to build one ride, contact a local job shop and work with them on making the parts.
Overrated / Underrated : Moderation
accetable in pluralizing acronyms, as well as for other "non word" elements.
It's a contraction. The apstrophe substitutes for the "e" in the suffix "es," which is an older, but still acceptable form.
The dropping of the apostrophe in pluralizing acronyms is a modern phemonemon that comes about because of the modern practice, unjustifiable by traditional usage, of treating acronyms as if they were actually words.
They are not. They are abbreviations.
KFG
I'm not sure how long it will last, but here's a mirror...
http://www.chrisnaimee.com/sd/dr1.htm
http://www.chrisnaimee.com/sd/dr2.htm
http://www.chrisnaimee.com/sd/dr3.htm
http://www.chrisnaimee.com/sd/dr4.htm
http://www.chrisnaimee.com/sd/dr5.htm
http://www.chrisnaimee.com/sd/dr6.htm
http://www.chrisnaimee.com/sd/dr7.htm
http://www.chrisnaimee.com/sd/dr8.htm
http://www.chrisnaimee.com/sd/dr9.htm
http://www.chrisnaimee.com/sd/dr10.htm