Yes so so sad given how easily preventable.bolding mine
Thank you. ^^^
I meant only the headrest being removed, as opposed to the entire seat ?
That was the portion that does not appear in the articles.
Some sources say the entire seat was removed; if true, this is wise and they need to know if something snapped off or was improperly fastened .
I am so sorry for this precious teen's family.
In my opinion only -- as I was not there, nor am I employed by the park -- the tragedy was preventable.
This is the most difficult part to accept, since it would appear from all of the articles posted here and in msm that his seat may not have been locked correctly.
A freak or random accident might be understandable, but not faulty light indicators or the v-shaped harness that might not have been checked ?
The latter would mean Tyre's death was preventable.
On the other hand, here's a thought : Is it possible that the light indicator was 'green' or 'on', showing that all of the restraints were properly secured -- but in reality one seat was not ?
If this is a likely scenario, the error would be on the manufacturer of the ride, and not the employees.
Again my two cent's worth.
I don't think they would remove any part unless it was obviously broken, and we know from their reports that wasn't the case. They announced they would be running many trials to see what failed and the forensics engineers would start by doing that with the ride exactly as it was.
Also the seat is a complex piece of machinery. It has not just a seat but it has the over shoulder harness, and it is designed to tip forward and back during the ride, and it has hydraulic/pneumatic instrumentation attached. You can look up patent designs for similar mechanisms. My point being that until you knew what failed, you probably wouldn't start removing random components for no reason.