A theme park's rides all surge at once, and the backstage diesel is louder than the queue.

Big rides draw synchronised power surges across a park on an edge-of-town grid, while diesel gensets parked behind the scenes add noise and fumes to a place selling clean fun.
Synchronised thrills, synchronised peaks
A theme park is a cluster of very large motors that fire on a schedule. Coasters launch, drop towers reset and water rides pump in waves the public never sees on the bill. Those coincident surges set a demand peak the park pays for all season, even though average consumption is far lower.
Many parks sit on the edge of town on a connection that strains under summer peak, and the usual fix backstage is a row of diesel generators that are loud, smelly and increasingly hard to permit near guests.
Smooth the surges, retire the diesel
On-site storage absorbs the gentle daytime base and releases hard into ride launches, so the grid sees a flatter curve and the demand charge drops. For shows and night events, stored power replaces the backstage generator, removing the noise and exhaust from the guest experience. Where a park genuinely needs new firm capacity, containerised clean generation can stand in without a diesel footprint.
Why 247 Energy
247 Energy supercapacitor storage runs at 55 dB(A), against roughly 72 dB(A) for a lithium system's cooling, quiet enough to place near a queue. It catches and returns ride energy at up to 10C. For off-grid stages and remote attractions, 247 containerised LNG units deploy in under four hours with 99% less NOx than diesel.
