Frank Hrubetz & Company
Frank Hrubetz & Co., Inc. was an American manufacturer of amusement park flat rides. Established in 1939, the company was located near the Salem, Oregon airport. It sold both trailer-mounted and permanent model rides to theme parks throughout the world. Models included the Meteor, Paratrooper, Round Up, and Tip Top.[1] In 1968, the company's estimated business brought in over $1.5 million and its plant space was 25,000 square feet.[2] By the early 1970s, Hrubetz was selling 60 rides each year, making it the second largest manufacturer of amusement rides in the United States.[1] They closed their manufacturing doors in 1992.
History
The company was founded by Frank Hrubetz, a 1930 graduate of Oregon State College with a degree in mechanical engineering. Hrubetz worked for the Eyerly Aircraft Company which developed a 10-foot airplane on a fixed base for training pilots. Called the Orientator, it used a small electric propeller and could climb, dive and turn. The company discovered it was more profitable as entertainment after one buyer placed the trainer on the corner of Hollywood and Vine in Los Angeles as an amusement ride. While working for Lee Eyerly, Hrubetz helped develop other rides including the Loop-O-Plane and later Roll-O-Plane—two small bullet-shaped cars that spun rapidly on a vertical axis. In 1939, Hrubetz left Eyerly to become a competitive manufacturer with Frank Hrubetz & Co.[1]
Flat rides
- 20 Passengers (10 gondolas) hydraulic drive park and single trailer models
- 20 Passengers (10 gondolas) rim/tire drive park and single trailer models
- 20 Passengers (10 gondolas) shaft drive park and single trailer models
- 24 passenger rim/tire drive single trailer model
- 30 passenger rim/tire drive single trailer model 18-18.5 RPM, 45 degree tilt, with chain restraints
- 42-person also known as the Super Round-Up
- Tip Top
- 20 Passenger (10 spinning cups) rotate then lift turntable 20° tilt, park & single trailer models
- Fireball
- 16 Passenger (8 Spinning Cups) rotate with cups on end of swinging spindle attached to sweep, park & single trailer models
References
- 1 2 3 Sellard, Dan (15 August 1971). "The Fun Fabricators". Eugene Register-Guard.
- ↑ http://photos.salemhistory.net/cdm/singleitem/collection/sj/id/597
Gallery
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Paratrooper by Frank Hrubetz & Co., permanent installation at Kennywood Park
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Round up by Frank Hrubetz & Co., permanent installation at Stricker's Grove
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Electric motor, belt, hydraulic pump, and belt to final drive tire propulsion of a mobile Round up by Frank Hrubetz & Co. at a funfair in Germany
External links
- The Flat Joint - Amusement, Fair and Carnival Rides Rides, by manufacturer.