Steel Dragon 2000
Appearance
Steel Dragon 2000 | |
---|---|
Nagashima Spa Land | |
Location | Nagashima Spa Land |
Coordinates | 35°01′52″N 136°43′48″E / 35.031156°N 136.730078°E |
Status | Operating |
Opening date | 1 August 2000 |
Cost | $52,000,000 USD |
General statistics | |
Type | Steel |
Manufacturer | D. H. Morgan Manufacturing |
Designer | Steve Okamoto |
Track layout | Out and Back |
Lift/launch system | One lift hill with two chains |
Height | 97 m (318 ft) |
Drop | 93.5 m (307 ft) |
Length | 2,479 m (8,133 ft) |
Speed | 152.9 km/h (95.0 mph) |
Inversions | 0 |
Duration | 4:00 |
Max vertical angle | 68° |
Height restriction | 140–185 cm (4 ft 7 in – 6 ft 1 in) |
Trains | Multiple trains with 7 cars. Riders are arranged 2 across in 2 rows for a total of 28 riders per train. |
Trains built by | Bolliger and Mabillard |
Steel Dragon 2000 at RCDB Pictures of Steel Dragon 2000 at RCDB |
The Steel Dragon 2000 is a steel roller coaster at Nagashima Spa Land amusement park in Mie Prefecture, Japan. It is the longest roller coaster in the world.[1]
Design
[change | change source]Steel Dragon 2000 is the tallest coaster to use a traditional chain lift. Because of the length of the lift hill, two chains are used—one for the bottom half and one for the top half. A single chain would have been too long, heavy and very slow, at least twice the weight of a single train. Special brakes allow two trains to be on the lift at the same time.
The building of Steel Dragon 2000 required much more steel than other coasters for earthquake protection. This put the cost of the coaster at over $50 million.[2]
References
[change | change source]- ↑ Goldish, Meish (2012). Amazing Amusement Park Rides, pp. 6-8. Bearport Publishing
- ↑ The Daily Telegraph (21 April 2011). "Top 10 tallest rollercoasters". Retrieved 19 February 2013.
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