News Cars-Themed Attractions at Magic Kingdom

build_it

Well-Known Member
IMG_5356.jpeg

Don’t worry, they’ve figured out how to make the ride vehicles fit into the existing timeline of Frontierland!
Oh…. Sorry, wrong park 🤣
 

JD80

Well-Known Member
Larger trackless vehicles are used at Reign of Kong and Fast and Furious. Speculation is that this is what they're using:



Ive been going over this attraction in my brain and I've been wondering what kind of "track" they are using. It's an AGV so it needs to be following a path whether that is reflectors, magnetic tape, RFID, in ground wire guidance or digital via SLAM.

Would Disney use GPS positioning for their attractions?
 

AidenRodriguez731

Active Member
Tiana’s time jump is about 70 years ahead of Big Thunder, which takes place in the 1850s. Cars takes us forward about the same amount (80 years) to the 2000s. Cars doesn’t clash with Frontierland any more than Tiana already clashes with Big Thunder

Meanwhile, Jungle Cruise and Pirates in Adventureland take place centuries apart without a problem. Same with Snow White in Fantasyland which takes place centuries before Winnie the Pooh

The lands manage just fine, and I can see how Cars will too
Just want to point out that CBJ was also in the 1920s. We know Grizzly Hall was built in 1898 and Ursus died in 1928 which we know happened before the show we see. Not to mention, Henry is Ursus's grandson. So we're almost certainly past the 1930s by the time he's an adult.
 

Incomudro

Well-Known Member
Ive been going over this attraction in my brain and I've been wondering what kind of "track" they are using. It's an AGV so it needs to be following a path whether that is reflectors, magnetic tape, RFID, in ground wire guidance or digital via SLAM.

Would Disney use GPS positioning for their attractions?
If this is the system they use, I wonder how Disney is going to run enough of them at a four seat capacity?
This is billed as a Rallye Race - as opposed to a rock crawl, and Rallye Races are fast.
I know fast is a relative term, but the ride would need some level of a brisk pace to convey what it is supposed to be.
 

ᗩLᘿᑕ ✨ ᗩζᗩᗰ

HOUSE OF MAGIC
Premium Member
If this is the system they use, I wonder how Disney is going to run enough of them at a four seat capacity?
This is billed as a Rallye Race - as opposed to a rock crawl, and Rallye Races are fast.
I know fast is a relative term, but the ride would need some level of a brisk pace to convey what it is supposed to be.
"Rock crawl" doesn't have the alliteration needed to sell it as an attraction.
 

CoasterCowboy67

Well-Known Member
Because unlike adventure, which is a wide theming net and very elastic concept in terms of time, “frontier” in the public consciousness is not. Frontier in America has a very specific definition and place in time. Using your logic, they could put a ride exploring another galaxy in Frontierland as it’s [our universe] one of the last “frontiers” humanity has yet to physically explore
I disagree. I think you poll 100 Disney guests “what is the frontier?” and you’ll get more answers about a geography than a time

Space has nothing to do with the geography of the American frontier so not sure why you think that’d be consistent with my logic. I’m talking about wilderness West of the Mississippi, not the frontier as a vague concept
 

James Alucobond

Well-Known Member
No, you’re wrong. Here’s a screenshot of Disney’s own website describing the ride. “Soon after gold was first discovered here in the 1850s, eerie things began to happen”

LINK: https://disneyworld.disney.go.com/attractions/magic-kingdom/big-thunder-mountain-railroad/

View attachment 813276
Yes, the 1850s are when eerie things began to happen, a result of the miners desecrating the mountain. A natural disaster later follows (flood at WDW’s version), and the town is subsequently abandoned. Still later, it is reopened for exploration. I think it’s usually said that the ride takes place in the 1890s or so, with all of those intervening events happening over the course of about 40 years.
 

Incomudro

Well-Known Member
I disagree. I think you poll 100 Disney guests “what is the frontier?” and you’ll get more answers about a geography than a time

Space has nothing to do with the geography of the American frontier so not sure why you think that’d be consistent with my logic. I’m talking about wilderness West of the Mississippi, not the frontier as a vague concept
I don't think too people consider the modern western regions as frontier anymore, considering it's all been explored and settled.
I believe most people consider a frontier to be a place that is beyond our reach, like space and the oceans.
(Yes, man has reached the deepest parts of the ocean, but it is still a great challenge - and still mostly unexplored.)
Disney's Frontierland depicts a time when the American West was still a frontier.
 

CoasterCowboy67

Well-Known Member
Yes, the 1850s are when eerie things began to happen, a result of the miners desecrating the mountain. A natural disaster later follows (flood at WDW’s version), and the town is subsequently abandoned. Still later, it is reopened for exploration. I think it’s usually said that the ride takes place in the 1890s or so, with all of those intervening events happening over the course of about 40 years.
Huh? Did you read the full description? The mine is already haunted with runaway trains upon its discovery in the 1850s, not later

I’m not going by fan fiction
 

James Alucobond

Well-Known Member
Huh? Did you read the full description? The mine is already haunted with runaway trains upon its discovery in the 1850s, not later

I’m not going by fan fiction
The mine opens in the 1850s, and eerie things begin happening immediately after construction. This includes trains running on their own. This is not when guests visit. Guests visit later after the eerie occurrences and disasters worsen, culminating in a flood that destroys the adjacent town, causing the miners to abandon it. The mines have just been reopened for exploration.
 

Quietmouse

Well-Known Member
Frontier airlines mainly flies out west to Colorado, California, etc.

Frontierland is just about time and place as much as it about geography.

If we are solely talking about the environment switch over from roa to piston peak then it 100 percent matches the theme.

As far as modern cars racing thru a national forest that’s up for debate.
 

el_super

Well-Known Member
Why not put this whole attraction in Animal Kingdom and have it be a Rallye Race through Serka Zong....that would maske as much sense as this...

But then what would replace the river in Magic Kingdom?

Disney's Frontierland depicts a time when the American West was still a frontier.

Maybe it shouldn't? That's what Disney is trying to solve for. They want a new theme for Frontierland.

They should consider just changing the name to something else so the fans will be happy.
 

danlb_2000

Premium Member
If this is the system they use, I wonder how Disney is going to run enough of them at a four seat capacity?
This is billed as a Rallye Race - as opposed to a rock crawl, and Rallye Races are fast.
I know fast is a relative term, but the ride would need some level of a brisk pace to convey what it is supposed to be.

That is really just a concept design, in theory it could be implemented on a larger vehicle.
 

celluloid

Well-Known Member
The same people who we see saying it fits the concept of Frontierland after many pages are now saying this changes the land and it is Disney's solve for it.

One is the same poster who said this is needed to lift attendance but for about a year has stated Disney does not wants less people in their parks.
 

el_super

Well-Known Member
The same people who we see saying it fits the concept of Frontierland after many pages are now saying this changes the land and it is Disney's solve for it.

Did I say it fits Frontierland? I've been pretty clear that the "rules" are Disney's to change. The goal of this project is to revitalize an aging dying concept of a theme park land and this project will absolutely do that and be a huge success. Whether it "fits" or not is pretty trivial.


One is the same poster who said this is needed to lift attendance but for about a year has stated Disney does not wants less people in their parks.

Huh? What does this even mean?
 

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