Disneyland Railroad Tinder Ride
My husband is a
train nut. He loves to watch the trains go by at Disneyland and enjoys riding
them even more. We have made our visit to Walt’s Carolwood Barn in Griffith
Park at the Los Angeles Live Steamers Museum and plan on going more. We had
ridden in the Lilly Bell but there was one thing at DLR that we had never done.
We had never ridden the Tinder Car! I decided his birthday is next month and
the park will be busy then so I got him a Tinder Ride on our last visit as an
early birthday present!
Ok, you may ask
what a Tinder Car is. The Tinder Car on a train is the car that carries the Tinder
or fuel for the fire that powers the steam engine. It is right behind the engineer.
All five of the Disneyland trains have Tinder Cars but only two have seats that
guests can ride on. Only two guests can ride the Tinder Car at a time and you
start your ride at the Main Street Station and go the full trip around the
park.
When Walt built
the park he had WED build two trains from scratch. The C.K. Holiday and the
E.P. Ripley were built in 1954-55 by WED and Walt had them design them with
seats on the Tinder Car behind the engineer so he could take his friends for a
ride up front with him.
Today you can
catch a ride on the Tinder Car of the Holiday (Engine 1) or the Ripley (Engine
2) by asking the conductor at the Main Street Station for a Tinder Ride. You
will have most likely have to wait a while for the train to come around. If
they are refueling, adding water or letting off steam you will have to wait
until they have a complete run without any stops to service the engine. For your
safety they cannot have you on the Tinder when they are doing any of these
things. You also can’t ride if they are training a new engineer. There is no charge for the Tinder Tour.
I walked up to the
conductor on Main Street and asked if we could have a Tinder ride. After
checking with the engineers on both the Holiday and the Ripley they found out
that we would have to wait for the Ripley and we would have to wait for several
trips around as there was already one person on the Tinder and when they go off
the Train would have to take on water. They told us it would be about forty
minutes. As it turned out we waited over two hours or about six or eight full
trips around the park. After they added water the next trip they needed to add
fuel. Each full trip around the park takes twenty minutes. We could not leave
the station because we would have lost our place in line for taking the next
Tinder. Was it worth the wait? For us it truly was!
Just think we were
sitting directly behind where Walt Disney himself sat to drive the train! We
were sitting where friends and family of Walt would have sat! It was exciting! Add
the fact that the engineer told us the history of the trains of Disneyland and
we were ecstatic.
Here are some of
the interesting things we learned.
Disneyland has five
working steam engines.
A maximum of four
trains can run at any one time because they only have four sets of cars.
The Tinder Car is
1/3 filled with fuel (bio diesel, partly made from the used cooking oil from
the parks fryers) and 2/3 fill with water to create the steam that powers the
engine.
There is a “Roundhouse”
(really a square building) that can house all five trains and the Monorail
trains at night or when not in use.
The first two engines
of the Disneyland Railroad were built for Disneyland by WED the other three
were old trains that were purchased and refurbished.
The oldest of the
trains was made in 1896 and was refurbished by WED for use at Disneyland.
All five trains
work the same way.
The newest of the
trains was built in 1954/55 by WED.
The first four
trains were named after executives of the Santa Fe Railroad, who sponsored the
train the first few years and many were friends of Walt’s.
The fifth train
was name after Disney Legend, Animator and train enthusiast Ward Kimball.
One of the trains
is out of the park for a complete refurbishment. It has already been gone for
two years and should be back by August when another of the trains will be taken
out of service for refurbishment.
Disney has a full
time staff to do daily maintenance and routine repair on the trains.
Many of the
engineers are retired from other jobs and do this for the fun of driving the
trains.
We learned a lot
of other fun things such as how the controls work and how the engineers feel
about their job. Feel free to watch the following video to hear the entire
Tinder Ride Tour.
Do you know if they do this at Disney World as well? Thanks!
ReplyDeleteFrom what I've been told WDW does NOT have Tinder Rides. WDW does have a special Train Tour you can purchase.
ReplyDeleteIt's tender, spelled with an "e," not an "i." It's called a that because the car "tends" to the needs of the locomotive. Only engines 1, 2 and 4 have separate tenders. The other two engines have their fuel and water bunkers attached directly to the locomotive frame (making it all one unit).
ReplyDeleteThank you for the spelling correction. Simple error. I know that it carries the fuel. The fact that 1, 2, and 4 have the separate tenders is why they are the only ones that give tender rides. :-)
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