Hey guys! Read here often, but comment rarely.
Just back from a week in Orlando and hit Volcano Bay for four separate days. Here are a few of my observations:
1. You can get plenty of rides in if you commit to getting there early. We stayed at Cabana Bay and were first in on early entry for three of our four days. On each of those early entry days, we rode at least a dozen slides in the first two hours, including multiple rides on the water coaster. On our check-in day, we hopped over around lunch time just to "check things out" We rode one slide that day, the water coaster with a 120 minute tapu wait. For the other three days, we rode every single thing we wanted as much as we wanted and never felt like we didn't get our money's worth for ride time.
2. Premium seating and cabanas are really not worth the money. We got better seating from arriving early and picking out loungers under a large umbrella. I brought an aquabox to lock onto my lounger and it worked great, saved on locker costs. And we didn't lose time by waiting for the concierge to pick out our seat or to wait for a server to bring us something. The food and bar lines were never a big issue to us, and I could grab a meal or a drink much quicker than the premium seats behind me could have it brought to them. We were rarely in the chairs anyway until later in the day due to riding all the slides.
3. Yes, still plenty of construction ongoing. But in the week I was down there, several things were completed and work kept ongoing. The park was solid on our first day and kept getting better as more features came online.
4. Only saw one wait at guest services all week, and that was on my first day when I went to check to see if my glasses had ended up in lost and found (It was entirely my fault that I lost them, do NOT wear glasses in the action river). Maybe about a twenty minute wait there. The rest of the week, I could walk up with no more than a five minute wait to check back again. The glasses never showed up. I honestly didn't see any really upset people there, everyone looked to be having a great time.
5. Ride ops. I think there is still plenty of room to improve this. Some things are design related (weight restrictions on the volcano drop slides and the outer mat racer slides) There's also room on the group slides to add single rider lines to maximize capacity, would be a good "standby" non-tap thing. I honestly think the Tiawahna tubes (spelling?) could be permanent "ride now" standby tubes. They are the last slides in the park to build lines and rarely are they more than 20 minutes. And some slides just have bad ride-through times right now. OhYah and OhNo both will not dispatch the next slide until the pool beneath is completely clear, they could realistically nearly double capacity if the lifeguards would just wait for the swimmer to clear the splashdown area and let the next rider come.
Overall though, we had a wonderful time down there and felt we got much more than our money's worth from our days down there. I felt that going for early entry or as early as possible and/or staying late makes for good use of your time. The park cleared out in the evenings and after rain and the ride times were pretty much walk-ons from 8:00am until 9:30am in the mornings and after 6:00pm in the evenings. If you come from 11:00am until 4:00pm and expect to ride everything, you will not.