Rocket Rods
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Rocket Rods was an attraction in Tomorrowland at Disneyland in Anaheim, California.
Attractions facts
- Grand Opening: May 22, 1998 (Opened with the Re-Opening of Tomorrowland)
- Closing Date: September 2000 - Officially Closed April 2001
- Designer: Walt Disney Imagineering
- Seating: 5 per vehicle
- Top Speed: 35 mph
- Ride Duration: 3:00
- Previous attraction:
- * Circle-Vision 360° (queue)
- * PeopleMover
- Present attraction: Buzz Lightyear Astro Blasters
- Height Requirement: 46"

History
Rocket Rods opened on May 22, 1998 as part of the New Tomorrowland. The new high-speed attraction ran on the former PeopleMover track. Riders entered the attraction at the former Circle-Vision 360 building at the front of Tomorrowland. In the first room, huge blueprints of old and current Tomorrowland attractions were hung on the walls; along with actual former Tomorrowland attraction vehicles, which were repainted like blueprints (The ride vehicles included were a PeopleMover car, a Rocket Jet, a Space Mountain rocket, and the front end of a Mark III Disneyland Monorail train). After the blueprints, you pass "proposals" to extend the Rocket Rods highway all the way to John Wayne Airport and other nearby destinations. The next room of the queue was the nine-screen CircleVision theater, where guests watched old transportation videos, excerpts from the CircleVision film "America the Beautiful," and even a video featuring the evolution of General Motors cars to an electronic version of the Steppenwolf hit, "Born to Be Wild" composed by former Oingo Boingo member Steve Bartek. Guests then continue down a tunnel that leads to the elevated Rocket Rods station in the middle of Tomorrowland.
Guests then board a 5-seat Rocket Rod before moving forward to a staging area similar to that of drag racing. Anticipation is built as the lights change from red, to yellow, to green, and the vehicle zooms down a straightaway toward the entrance of Tomorrowland while performing a small wheelie. The Rocket Rod took guests through the Star Tours building, then into a tunnel. In this tunnel, riders experience the effect of nearly colliding with an oncoming Rocket Rod, but in reality, it is only the vehicle's reflection in a mirror. The Rocket Rod takes guests through Space Mountain, offering a very brief view of that attraction. Then, the vehicle takes riders back outside again, but then enters the Carousel Theater, home of the Innoventions attraction. After going through a semicircular trip through Innoventions, the Rocket Rod takes riders through a series of turns and dips above Autopia and the former Submarine Voyage. Then, the Rod passes right next to the Disneyland Monorail station before entering the Rocket Rods queue building. The vehicle then travels back up the straightaway to the station.
Rocket Rods were the first attraction to house a Single Rider lane due to its long lines and limited capacity.
Demise of the Rocket Rods
The Rocket Rods closed in September 2000 for a refurbishment that was to last until Spring 2001, but no work was ever seen on the attraction. In April 2001, the Los Angeles Times and The Orange County Register reported that Rocket Rods would never reopen.There are a number of reasons that the Rocket Rods closed. The Rocket Rods completed the course of the 16-minute PeopleMover in only about 3 minutes. Because the Rocket Rods did not have a large enough budget to bank the curves of the track, the Rocket Rods had to slow down substantially to maneuver the turns. The budget would have been larger if the attraction had a corporate sponsor. The constant changes in speed caused the vehicles' onboard computer systems to fail, shutting down the entire attraction. The attraction broke down at least once a day, causing queues of up to 3 hours. It was not uncommon for guests to receive rain check passes to ride on another day.
The Rocket Rods were scrapped after the closure. One Rocket Rod survived, and was placed in front of the Hollywood & Dine restaurant at Disney's California Adventure Park, but it only remained there for a few months. It was gone by 2002.
After the closure of the Rocket Rods, hopes arose that the PeopleMover would be reinstalled. Rumors still circulate today, usually stating that the PeopleMover will return, possibly as a copy of the still-running Magic Kingdom version: Tomorrowland Transit Authority. The equipment used for the PeopleMover only still exists on the Rocket Rods track in some places, which would require much of the equipment to be reinstalled again.
The Rocket Rods queue area, which was formerly Circle-Vision 360, is now Buzz Lightyear Astro Blasters, which opened in March 2005. Many Disney theme park attractions pay homage to the attractions that preceded them, but there is no indication of any tribute to the Rocket Rods in the new attraction.
Also, Al Lutz, a Disney fan site writer, has revealed Disney has plans to bring back the PeopleMover and Rocket Jets. Although many Disney fans find the PeopleMover's return practically inevitable, some are skeptical about the removal of the current Astro Orbitor in favor of a new version of the classic Rocket Jets.
Music
The attraction featured its own theme song "Magic Highways," composed by the Sherman Brothers, which played in the attraction's queue and exit area. Another song from the attraction is an instrumental version of Steppenwolf's Born To Be Wild, arranged by Oingo Boingo's Steve Bartek.References
- - Patent for the 'wheelie' effect. Includes a breakaway view of the Rocket Rod vehicle
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