Shockwave (Drayton Manor)

The Shockwave (Originally The 7up Shockwave & npower Shockwave) is an Intamin stand-up roller coaster, located at Drayton Manor Theme Park at Drayton Bassett in the United Kingdom. It was opened in 1994 and is one of the only two stand-up coasters in Europe. It is also the only stand-up roller coaster with a zero-gravity roll ever made.

Shockwave
Logo used since 2016
Drayton Manor Theme Park
LocationDrayton Manor Theme Park
Park sectionAction Park
Coordinates52°36′45″N 1°42′58″W
StatusOperating
Opening date26 March 1994
Cost£4 million
General statistics
TypeSteel
ManufacturerIntamin
DesignerWerner Stengel
Mark Golding
ModelStand-up roller coaster
Track layoutOut and back
Lift/launch systemChain lift hill
Height119.7 ft (36.5 m)
Drop105 ft (32 m)
Length1,640 ft (500 m)
Speed53 mph (85 km/h)
Inversions4
Duration2:00
G-force4
Height restriction55 in (140 cm)
Trains2 trains with 6 cars. Riders are arranged 4 across in a single row for a total of 24 riders per train.
Shockwave at RCDB
Pictures of Shockwave at RCDB

The ride, designed by Werner Stengel, was created as part of a two-year, £4m project in 1993-94. The Shockwave's station is located directly above Splash Canyon's station area, in the 'Action Park' area next to G Force.

Ride Experience

The Shockwave, which reaches 53 mph (85 km/h) and delivers up to 4 g, features a lift to 119.7 ft (36.5 m), then an 105 ft (32 m) drop into a loop followed by a zero-g roll, 2 corkscrews and bends around back into the station. Originally, the track was white with brown supports, but between 2004 and 2012 it was repainted to have a light blue track and turquoise supports. Also in 2012 the Trains were repainted: 1 Blue and the other Red. Both will operate on busy days. Originally, the train would re enter the station by braking to a low speed and moving back to the loading area; now it stops completely before moving back to the loading area. In 2016, the ride and trains received new logos

In 1994, the ride opened along with two other roller coasters in the UK; the Pepsi Max Big One at Pleasure Beach Blackpool and Nemesis at Alton Towers (which opened one week before the Shockwave).[1]

Train entering the double Corkscrews
gollark: I'm aware that the IEC specified the binary prefixes. However, this does not mean that the SI metric ones were ever binary.
gollark: People used them wrongly as binary in computing, but they were wrong.
gollark: They have always been base 10.
gollark: Wrong.
gollark: Your incorrect use of prefixes means you are 1 "tebicringe" (2^40).

References

  1. "An Interview with Colin Bryan". Coaster Kingdom. 2004. Retrieved 2006-03-24.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.