Jump to content

Rumba Rapids

Coordinates: 51°25′58.16″N 0°35′48.72″W / 51.4328222°N 0.5968667°W / 51.4328222; -0.5968667
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Vanished user 3.1415926535897932384626433 (talk | contribs) at 05:24, 1 June 2012 (→‎Ride: Sp). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Rumba Rapids
Thorpe Park
Coordinates51°25′58.16″N 0°35′48.72″W / 51.4328222°N 0.5968667°W / 51.4328222; -0.5968667
Opening date1987 (1987)
General statistics
TypeRiver rafting ride
ManufacturerIntamin
Lift systemYes
Length460 m (1,510 ft)
Capacity1000 riders per hour
Duration4 min 20 sec

Rumba Rapids is a rapids ride at Thorpe Park, Chertsey, Surrey. It opened in 1987, meaning it's the oldest ride currently still in service at Thorpe Park, under the name of Thunder River. Since then it has been refurbished. This was in 2001 when its name changed to Ribena Rumba Rapids because of its sponsor, Ribena along with other improvements. In 2007 Ribena's sponsorship contract ended and the ride was named simply Rumba Rapids. Since the refurbishment in 2001 the ride has become significantly slower.

Ride

The ride starts in the station at the top of a hill. The boats then go around a bend down a hill, it then goes round another bend and into a tunnel. The tunnel sometimes has a waterfall feature on the entrance. The tunnel also features a waterfall feature within the tunnel although the boat does not go through it. The boat then exits the tunnel towards a wave machine with rocks in front of it. In the rare occasion that the occupants of the boat all sit on the side facing the wave machine it is possible to get stuck in between the centre rocks, however this usually requires more than four people. The boat goes under a bridge which is part of the queue line. It goes towards a tower with a oversized shower head attached. This shower head used to drop water on the unsuspecting guests but was removed. The tower currently holds an On Ride Photo camera. The boat then approaches a series of water jets and stops at the lift hill. After a short wait the boat goes up the lift hill back to the station. A staff member guides you out of the boat and you exit going past the On Ride Photo booth. The exit gate features a reptile on a wall squirting water at you.

Accident

In the ride's opening year of 1986, an 11 year old boy called Jonathan White was thrown from a boat and lost an ear. the news was broken by Children's BBC TV news programme, Newsround.[1]