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It was manufactured by Mack Rides and to my knowledge , yes they still make them. They re-opened Pirates in Batavia a few years ago, albeit with newer and more up to date technology than Pirate Adventure.heres the main question does the manufacture still make things like that and who is it?
If you think about it PA was just a mini log flume style ride with boats instead of logs, not all that different from SF10, just smaller drops.It was manufactured by Mack Rides and to my knowledge , yes they still make them. They re-opened Pirates in Batavia a few years ago, albeit with newer and more up to date technology than Pirate Adventure.
The main difference is that the body of water is so much larger in Pirate compared to a Log Flume which is just a single trough of water. This makes health and safety and also maintenance much harder. The method of boat transportation is different too, Log Flume boats are moved using the current from the water being pumped through the trough consistently, whereas Pirate is a still standing body of water and the boats are moved using individual pumps situated every so often along the trough.If you think about it PA was just a mini log flume style ride with boats instead of logs, not all that different from SF10, just smaller drops.
Fingers crossed Looping know how popular it used to be (and still is).
I think it would still be massively popular. We've just got back from Disneyland Paris and the Pirates of the Caribbean ride always had a big queue so I definitely think there is a market for Pirate Adventure still.I remember when it opened in 1990 the queues for it was massive all season. Back then it was wristbands and tickets and my mum only paid for tickets for this and the jungle cruise