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Silver Dollar City 2013 Coaster


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It only cost $10 million? I would've thought it was a bit more than that. Not bad. I'd love to ride this thing. I know everyone will focus on the double barrel roll (seeing as it is an inverting woodie) but I think the 81 degree first drop may be the best element on the ride!

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I'm pretty sure Colossus is the fastest in the world. But then again I thought Rattler was the fastest a couple posts above, so I would take my knowledge with a grain of salt :P

What is Colossus? According to the rankings it's not even in the top.

See here. Small explanation as to why the speed isn't listed.

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rcdb doesn't have the speed for Colossus.

On the page for Colossus: Notes: The Heide-Park Soltau website lists the top speed of the Colossos at 120 km/h. This statistic is mathematically impossible if the drop is indeed 48.5 m which could only produce a top speed of about 110 km/h.

(68.3 mph)

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I'm pretty sure Colossus is the fastest in the world. But then again I thought Rattler was the fastest a couple posts above, so I would take my knowledge with a grain of salt :P

What is Colossus? According to the rankings it's not even in the top.

See here. Small explanation as to why the speed isn't listed.

Shenanigans was called!

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To help distinguish a "steel" coaster from a woodie, I don't worry about the supports. Instead, I look closely at what the wheels ride on, and how that is supported.

Most* coasters have steel "running rails". On traditional wooden coasters, that strip of steel is thin (<1.0"?) and is completely supported by wood. It actually follows the contour of the wood. It is really only there to prevent wear and tear on the wood. The wood can be made from laminate strips that are bent as a group, or a laminate chunk that is machined instead of bent.

On steel coasters, that "running rail" is actually a tube or beam, and is strong enough to define its own shape. It is only supported by the structure at intermittent points, a foot apart (or more).

The topper track pictured above looks to me like a hybrid. The running rails are steel tubes, and much more rigid than the rails on a typical woodie, but it is completely supported by wood. I suppose a park could get away with calling it wood or steel.

Ultimately this distinction is interesting to us fans but somewhat trivial, unless parks are making marketing claims.

"Outlaw Run" looks fun regardless!

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