Timber Drop

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Timber Drop
First hill on Timber Drop
Fraispertuis City
LocationFraispertuis City
StatusOperating
Opening dateJuly 12, 2011 (2011-07-12)
Cost3,000,000 Euros
General statistics
TypeSteel
ManufacturerS&S Worldwide‎
ModelEl Loco
Height29.26 m (96.0 ft)
Speed66 km/h (41 mph)
Inversions2
Duration1 min, 20 sec
Max vertical angle113.1°
Height restriction120 cm (3 ft 11 in)
Timber Drop at RCDB

Timber Drop is a steel roller coaster located at the Fraispertuis City amusement park in Jeanménil, France. With a slope of 113.1°, the coaster held the world record for the steepest drop in the world from 1 July 2011 to 16 July 2011 and currently holds the record for the steepest roller coaster drop in Europe.

History

On 8 October 2010 at the trade show of the Euro Attractions Show in Rome, Fraispertuis City finalized the purchase of a new roller coaster to be built by S&S Worldwide.[1][2] Named Timber Drop, the coaster was inaugurated on 1 July 2011 and opened to the public the next day. The coaster is an El Loco model, which has variants in 5 other parks.[3] When Timber Drop was installed, two other El Loco coasters existed: One named Steel Hawg at Indiana Beach in the United States and another named Mumbo Jumbo at Flamingo Land Theme Park & Zoo in England.[4] Steel Hawg (opened in 2008) and Mumbo Jumbo (opened in 2009) were holders of the world's steepest roller coaster drops of 111° and 112° respectively. Timber drop had a drop to 113.1°, which allowed it to win the title when opening.[5][6][7] However, this record was exceeded fifteen days later, with the opening of Takabisha (121°) at Fuji-Q Highland in Japan on July 16 2011.[8]

With a total budget of 4 million euros, Timber drop represented the largest investment in the park since its inception. More than one million euros is spent on decoration and arrangement of attraction, entrusted to the company Artistic Concrete Workshop.[9] The theme of the attraction is that of redwoods. Trains and pass through several tree stumps during the run, various cut logs decorate the area surrounding the attraction.

Since its opening, a counter was set up on the attraction, to count the number of visitors riding Timber Drop. The park, in partnership with the association "Trees for Life" decided to educate visitors on the issue of deforestation. Fraispertuis City committed to donate money to replant and maintain one tree for every 500 riders. In 2011, the park has recorded 146,500 riders, which led to the replanting of 293 trees in Benin.[10]

Coaster layout

Immediately after leaving the station, the car turns right and crosses a redwood stump before climbing to 30 meters high. Once up, the car carries a small passage in S on the right, immediately turns to the left and began a fall inclined 113.1 ° inside a trunk. The car immediately climbed, turns left and crosses the first brake of course. Following two corners on the left, the first being raised outward and the second inwardly chained a diving loop . The car goes back and spends the second brake route. Turn right immediately to address a Heartline roll slightly downward. The car is going back through the trunk before crossing, pass a hairpin turn to the right and then raised arrives on the brakes of the end.

References



Extra

http://rcdb.com/m/fr/9503.htm [ archive ] ↑ http://www.engineeringexcitement.com/media/news/el-loco-coming-france%E2%80%99s-fraispertuis-city [ archive ] ↑ http://rcdb.com/m/fr/r.htm?ot=2&mo=8573 [ archive ] ↑ http://recordsgwr.kazeo.com/les-records-francais/la-descente-la-plus-inclinee-au-monde,a2534309.html [ archive ] ↑ http://www.tourisme-lorraine.fr/upload/dossiers-presse/Nouveautes-Lorraine-2011-DP-Dossier-de-Presse-CRT-Lorraine.pdf [ archive ] ↑ http://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/Search/Details/Steepest-roller-coaster-made-from-steel/65015.htm [ archive ] ↑ "The height of terror: Thrill seekers plummet 141ft on world's steepest roller coaster drop" on Mail Online [ archive ] ↑ Interview with Patrice Fleurent, director of the park, LOR'Actu [ archive ] ↑ Local Info of 30 December 2011 on the RCM radio.fr [ archive ]