Re: actually. . . . .!
Wolfspirit, on host 206.47.244.90
Sunday, June 4, 2000, at 11:06:40
actually. . . . . posted by shadowfax on Tuesday, May 30, 2000, at 22:50:47:
> It's not the bracing yourself itself that ruins the fun. . .It's the fact that bracing yourself means your arms aren't being held up. When you hit the positive g forces, they feel stronger if your hands are above your head because you have to work harder to keep them there. That increases the sensation of the g force.
Hey... "when you hit the positive g forces"??? *grin* I THINK what you mean is: that when you place your hands over your head, you raise your center of gravity relative to the car, and that causes the upper part of your body to whip around more (increases the sensation of the mysterious thrill factor, presumably. And perhaps the risk of whiplash :-}.
> > > Why, I've often wondered, do people hold their hands over their head when riding a roller coaster? > > > > If you don't hold them over your head, you're most likely instinctively using them to brace yourself; roller coaster purists believe bracing yourself lessens the fun. famous tried to get us to do that when we visited New Hampshire's local teeny weeny roller coasters at Canobie Lake Park. I'm undecided about whether it made a difference or not, but the wind felt good, so I kept doing it anyway.
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