Tuesday, con’t
The submarines at Finding Nemo Submarine Voyage are certainly eye-catching! Em and I chose to skip the attraction since we’d ridden it before. Hold your pitchforks, but even as a child I didn’t enjoy MK’s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea attraction and was not sorry to see it go.
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The reason I took the picture was actually for the rusting structure above the submarine. It brought back memories of a failed attraction that my family was fortunate to ride. Em and I were surprised that Disney allows the structure to remain in such poor condition.
Later we saw it from a different vantage point in Tomorrowland and it didn’t look as bad.
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What was the attraction? (Pics and description from interwebs)
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Rocket Rods was a high-speed thrill attraction themed around a “drag race of the future” as well as a futuristic rapid transit system. It utilized the existing one-mile long Peoplemover track, was three minutes long and cost $25 million to build - a colossal expense for a ride that was only open from May 1998 - September 2000.
The ride suffered from frequent breakdowns, resulting in intermittent closures and extremely long waits.
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My family can vouch for the extremely long waits. On our trip in April 1999, the end of the line began in Fantasyland and wove through Tomorrowland before reaching the actual queue space indoors.
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Most of the queue was in the former CircleVision Theater, where guests would barely move for an hour or more. It was the stuff nightmares were made from. Our kids would sit on the floor while waiting. (Every time I’m in the round room in Dinosaur with the skeleton and Bill Nye’s narration, I have PTSD flashbacks to the Rocket Rod wait!)
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My boys
loved Rocket Rods and I thought it was quite fun, especially the speeding parts. (The vehicles had to slow down for the track turns so the ride was a combination of slow/fast.) During our trip the boys experienced it three times, Woody and I twice each. Em rode on our final ride, wanting to experience what all the fuss was about.
But that wait was a killer! And putting fast vehicles on a track designed for a slow Peoplemover killed the attraction.
Sadly, nothing can be done to restore the track for the Peoplemover again. And the track cannot be removed because it is intertwined with other buildings in Tomorrowland.
Those who complain about today’s Imagineers and management decisions need to look at the boondoggle of Rocket Rods, over 25 years ago!