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The Beast is a wooden roller coaster located at Kings Island amusement park in Mason, Ohio, United States.Designed and manufactured in-house for approximately $3 million, the ride opened in 1979 as the tallest, fastest, and longest wooden roller coaster in the world.
Kingda Ka, the tallest roller coaster in the world from 2005 to 2024. Among the tallest wooden coasters in the world, El Toro at Six Flags Great Adventure in New Jersey features one of the longest drops. Colossos at Heide Park in Germany, one of the tallest wooden coasters in the world.
The Texas Giant was constructed using over 900,000 board feet (2,100 m 3) of wood. [4] The trains were manufactured by Philadelphia Toboggan Coasters. [2] The Texas Giant officially opened on March 17, 1990. [2] At opening, the ride was the world's tallest wooden roller coaster, standing 143 feet (44 m) high. [5]
Goliath is also the fastest wooden roller coaster in the world, with a top speed of 72 miles per hour (116 km/h). [12] [13] After Goliath opened, Six Flags Great America had the most wooden roller coaster track of any amusement park in the world. [29] However, this record was later surpassed by Kings Island with the opening of Mystic Timbers in ...
American Eagle is a wooden racing roller coaster located at Six Flags Great America theme park in Gurnee, Illinois. It was the first wooden roller coaster designed by Intamin of Switzerland and was built in 1981 by the contracting firm Figley-Wright at a cost of $10 million. While most of the records have since been broken, American Eagle had ...
The world's 4th longest wooden roller coaster. [60] Son of Beast: Kings Island: 2000 United States At the time of its opening, was the world's tallest and fastest wooden roller coaster, and the only wooden coaster to have an inversion, before that element was removed in 2007. It closed in 2009 and was demolished in 2012. [61] T Express ...
The new coaster features a" first-ever raven-truss dive" and the "largest zero-G stall in America. ... which Lakemont Park bills as the "oldest wooden roller coaster in the world," and newer ...
Screamin' Eagle is a wooden roller coaster located at Six Flags St. Louis in Eureka, Missouri.When it opened on April 10, 1976 for America's Bicentennial celebration, Guinness World Records listed it as the largest coaster at 110 feet (34 m) high and as the fastest coaster at 62 mph (100 km/h).