Medusa (Six Flags Discovery Kingdom)

Medusa

Medusa's loop.
Six Flags Discovery Kingdom
Coordinates 38°08′26″N 122°14′01″W / 38.14056°N 122.23361°W / 38.14056; -122.23361Coordinates: 38°08′26″N 122°14′01″W / 38.14056°N 122.23361°W / 38.14056; -122.23361
Status Operating
Opening date March 18, 2000
Cost $15,000,000 USD
General statistics
Type Steel Floorless Coaster
Manufacturer Bolliger & Mabillard
Designer Werner Stengel
Model Floorless
Lift/launch system Chain lift hill
Height 150 ft (46 m)
Drop 150 ft (46 m)
Length 3,937 ft (1,200 m)
Speed 65 mph (105 km/h)
Inversions 7
Duration 3:15
Capacity 1600 riders per hour
G-force 4.5
Height restriction 54 in (137 cm)
Flash Pass Available
Medusa at RCDB
Pictures of Medusa at RCDB

Medusa is a steel roller coaster located at Six Flags Discovery Kingdom in Vallejo, California.

Medusa opened in 2000 as the first floorless roller coaster on the west coast. Built by Bolliger & Mabillard, the coaster features a 150-foot (46 m)-tall lift hill with a 150-foot (46 m) drop, and the first Sea serpent roll element ever built on a B&M coaster. The ride is the longest coaster in Northern California at 3,937 feet (1,200 m) long and is notable as having one of the largest vertical loops in the world at 128 ft. It also shares the height record in Northern California with another ride in the same park, V2: Vertical Velocity, at 150 feet high.

It features the following seven inversions:

Ride experience

The ride starts with a large left-hand turnaround out of the station and onto the lift hill. At the top is a B&M pre-drop followed by a right turn. After that is the large 150' drop which achieves the same height as the lift hill despite the B&M Pre-Drop by dipping below ground level into a pit. The drop is followed by a 128' vertical loop. Medusa then features a dive loop to the left and a zero-G roll. The ride then enters a Sea-Serpent roll. After a very quick breather during the mid-course brakes, the train whips into a twisting left-hand drop into a flatspin under the brake run. The on-ride photo is taken directly after the first flatspin. The ride then travels through an inclined helix to the left before diving into the second flatspin. The ride's finale is a quick 85 degree banked helix to the right before a quick S-Turn, which creates the sensation that the train will run into one of the lift supports. Then, the ride will either glide into the brake run and travel back toward the station, or may come to a sudden stop if it is operating with three trains and another train is already in the station.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, January 31, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.