Taking the Plunge on California’s Coasters

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 02 Agustus 2013 | 17.35

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There are people who go to amusement parks for the rides, for the nostalgia, for the cotton candy and, of course, to placate their children. Then there are people like me, who buy a ticket with a singular purpose: to take as many roller coaster rides as humanly possible. So when I went to California, which has the most coasters of any state in the nation, it was the perfect place to binge on rides. I managed to take 40 roller coasters in eight parks. Here is a look at five of the most intriguing coasters I came across on my journey.

The Classic

The Giant Dipper

Thor Swift for The New York Times

Top speed
46 m.p.h.
Height
70 feet
Feature
Starting tunnel

Sometimes an oldie truly is a goody. And the Santa Cruz Beach Boardwalk boasts one of the best of the classics: the Giant Dipper, which has been thrilling riders since 1924. It's the fifth oldest coaster in the United States, has been declared a national historic landmark and is the focal point of a long, active boardwalk. Its white structure and red track soar to the skyline, providing views of Monterey Bay from the top of its lift hill. Like many boardwalk rides, this one can be paid for à la carte; it is not part of a park that has a flat-rate admission.

One of the most exciting aspects of the ride is the way that it starts. Just after leaving the station, it enters a pitch-black tunnel and twists and turns even before getting to the lift. After the first drop is an immediate hard turn that leads to a couple of hills before another turn and a set of bouncy hills. If you like the wind through your hair and your stomach in your throat, Giant Dipper is a fairly no-frills path to a feverish amount of air time, that feeling of weightlessness that coaster lovers crave.

Thor Swift for The New York Times

Flying Steel

Tatsu

Emily Berl for The New York Times; Six Flags Magic Mountain, Valencia, CA.

Top speed
62 m.p.h.
Height
170 feet
Feature
Pretzel loop

A coaster that simulates the feeling of flying, birdlike, through the sky is difficult to get right. You need restraints that don't feel too restrictive or uncomfortable, and you need enough height and speed to feel you're truly going places. Tatsu, the most breathtaking example of this type of coaster, rests along hilly, wooded terrain at Six Flags Magic Mountain in Valencia.

The ride is designed by Bolliger & Mabillard, a Swiss engineering company behind a number of flying coasters in parks around the country. These coasters send riders soaring on their stomachs suspended from a winding steel track. But Tatsu is the tallest and most majestic of the bunch. And because it is positioned along a particularly mountainous portion of the park and moves through four different areas of varying heights, the riders' perspective is continually changing. The lift hill, which gives a direct view of the ground below, climbs to 170 feet, yet feels much higher as you see the people walking though the park getting smaller and smaller. The ride reaches a speed of 62 m.p.h. as it moves through four different inversions. The one truly unforgettable element is a 124-foot "pretzel loop," which has tracks overlapping at the entry and exit points. It puts riders upside down and forces them to spend a few moments on their backs with extreme positive G-force pressure before emerging into the rest of the ride.

The New Woodie

Gold Striker

Thor Swift for The New York Times

Top speed
54 m.p.h.
Height
108 feet
Feature
Mine shaft

Wooden roller coasters, known among coaster fans as "woodies," have remained tremendously popular, even as innovative steel rides armed with the latest technology steal their thunder. Still, some parks invest in new woodies, where the suspense doesn't come from wondering whether the rickety rails will survive the ride.

Great America in Santa Clara decided to go the woodie route with Gold Striker, opened this year. The look of it from afar is a sight to behold: 700,000 square feet of fresh Southern yellow pine was enticing. But the ride has the swiftness and hairpin turns of a steelie. Unlike Giant Dipper, the Gold Striker relies on sharp curves — like an 85-degree bank at one point — rather than bouncy hills.

It starts off with a bang: there is a 103-foot first drop that goes through a tunnel, which the park calls the "Mine Shaft." (That is the tallest descent within a tunnel on a wooden coaster in the world.) Then the track makes a quick turn and races along above the ride queue, allowing those in line to feel the reverberations of the track as they wait. I rode the coaster within a month of its opening, a considerable bonus because there had been little time for the wood to shift around and for the ride to become bumpy. (Although it was before the park added an additional tunnel to shield the riders' screams from the park's neighboring properties.)

Thor Swift for The New York Times

Love at First Launch

Superman: Ultimate Flight

Thor Swift for The New York Times

Top speed
63 m.p.h.
Height
150 feet
Feature
Noninverting loop

This mini-thriller of a coaster comes from Premiere Rides, a Baltimore-based manufacturer that has specialized in launch coasters, which forgo a traditional lift hill in exchange for shooting its riders out the station without much warning.

From the ground, the track just looks like a big oval and a smaller circle, a simple design that ends up eliciting a complicated combination of elation and fear. Using electromagnetic propulsion, the coaster launches riders out of the station and slightly up a vertical twisty track. After losing momentum, the coaster reverses along that track, going through the station again and continues backward up the other side of the track. Again, momentum lost, the coaster zooms forward, going through the station a third time and climbs 150 feet vertically. At that height, the track then twists into a 360-degree roll before plunging downward and taking you through a small loop. So basically, it's insanity.

Superman is loaded with air time, and one of its most exciting elements is that final, compact noninverting loop, which means you complete a full loop but the track twists so that you don't go upside down — you're atop it at the highest point. The experience is exhilarating. While Ultimate Flight suffered some bad press last summer after a group of riders were stranded on the track, I rode the coaster multiple times with no problems.

Thor Swift for The New York Times

Thrills From the 4th Dimension

Green Lantern: First Flight

Emily Berl for The New York Times; Six Flags Magic Mountain, Valencia, CA.

Top speed
35 m.p.h.
Height
117 feet
Feature
Spinning seats

In all its emerald, snaky-looking glory, Green Lantern: First Flight is one of the most original roller coasters that California has to offer. And while it may not seem so at first glance — don't let the slow speed fool you — it is also one of the scariest. This ride fits into the category of "4th dimension coasters," where riders' seats pivot and turn independently of the direction of the track, creating a thrilling, if sometimes disorienting journey. The park has one other 4th dimension ride, X2, but the more straightforward course that the Green Lantern takes makes for a better experience.

Each car on this coaster, so to speak, has four seats on each side of the track but no floor. The seats spin around forward and backward, while the cars lunge through the breathtaking course and your feet dangle in the air. One person near me described the sensation as "life and death." The descent happens in segments: the track is level then drops off, plunging down to the next level section. With each drop, the screams get louder and the intensity doesn't let up. The final time I rode it, my last drop into the station ended with me and the other riders in my car fully upside down. It's both frightening and sensational all at once.

Emily Berl for The New York Times

By ALICIA DESANTIS, JESSIE DE WITT, NANCY DONALDSON, JOSH KELLER, MICHAEL PURETZ and KEVIN QUEALY


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