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Escalation

Image: Amy Voigt, Toledo Blade

There’s probably no single person as inherently tied to the Coaster Wars of the ‘90s and early 2000s as then-CEO of Cedar Fair, Dick Kinzel. Serving as the company’s chief since 1986 (and thus, overseeing the record-breaking developments of both Magnum XL-200 and Millennium Force), Kinzel’s vision for the growing family of Cedar Fair parks was clear: building bigger, taller, and faster

It makes sense. With B&M and Intamin as weapons dealers in the escalating arms race between regional parks, coaster lineups reaching ten or more coasters became increasingly standard across Cedar Fair and Six Flags parks – each vying for regional “staycation” summer dollars.

Cedar Point
Image: Cedar Point

For fans across early 2000s discussion boards, speculation ran rampant on what each park would announce next, whether B&M or Intamin reigned supreme, and who would ultimately control the “Roller Coaster Capital of the World” moniker. (With the opening of Millennium Force, Cedar Point offered 14 – the largest coaster collection on Earth, with Six Flags Magic Mountain hot on its tail.)

(It should be noted that Kinzel’s somewhat singular focus on thrills over just about anything else wasn’t without controversy. His extraordinary focus on the Coaster Wars arguably saw Cedar Fair’s legacy parks – and then its acquired parks, like Knott’s Berry Farm, the Paramount Parks, and the Lost Legend: Geauga Lake – develop decades of dependency on “extreme thrills” over just about anything else. Cedar Fair’s legacy parks have zero – zero! – dark rides between them, and ride lineups absent “mid-sized” coasters, flat-rides, or theming are frequent. Only Kinzel’s replacement with former Disneyland President Matt Ouimet in 2013 started to see some family flavor added back into Cedar Fair parks.)

So you can imagine that with Millennium Force paving the way, Cedar Fair was already in discussions with Intamin about what would come next… And though 11 years had separated Cedar Point’s 100-, 200-, and 300-foot installations, the unthinkable 400-foot barrier would be shattered much sooner than anyone thought.

Baby, I’m Ready To Go

Image: Joel A. Rogers, CoasterGallery.com (Used with permission)

In 2002 – just two years after Millennium’s debut – Cedar Point introduced Wicked Twister. The fifth of six Intamin Impulse coasters built between 2000 and 2003, the double-spiked-tower shuttle coaster was a mid-sized, compact addition to the park’s waterfront. Most assumed that the park’s 15th coaster was merely a dessert after the entree of Millennium Force. It turned out, though, that Wicked Twister was actually the appetizer for something bigger.

The same summer that Cedar Point opened Wicked Twister, the company opened Xcelerator at Knott’s Berry Farm – Intamin’s first hydraulic launch coaster.

Rather than the gradual, non-contact, electromagnetic acceleration provided by LIM and LSM technology (like Wicked Twister), Xcelerator used massive hydraulic motors and high-tension cable to instantaneously catapult a train out of the station and up a 205-foot-tall top hat looking out across Buena Park, California. As a prototype of Intamin’s next cutting-edge ride technology, Xcelerator was a success.

So when a few accessory ride relocations, land clearing, and some conspicuous concrete footers appeared along Cedar Point’s midway, message boards were alight with rumors… of course, speculation shifted into overdrive when – on August 21, 2002 – the blazing yellow supports and cherry red track of an Intamin Accelerator model were dropped off at Cedar Point’s front door.

Image: Andrew Hyde, Twitter

By time the park closed for the season (essentially halting coverage), those pieces had been assembled into the climb into and pull-out of a vertical launch tower just like Xcelerator’s. But without any official word from the park, no one knew exactly what form Cedar Point’s version of a hydraulic launch coaster would take…

Then, on January 9, 2003, it was official. Top Thrill Dragster wouldn’t just give Cedar Point the world’s second hydraulically-launched coaster; it would obliterate the unthinkable 400-foot height barrier, just three years after the world’s first 300-foot full circuit coaster debuted across the park. It seemed absolutely impossible. Yet it was real…

Race for the Sky

Image: Cedar Fair

Top Thrill Dragster – Cedar Point’s $25 million, record-breaking, cloud-piercing roller coaster – officially opened on May 4, 2003. Only Dragster’s hot-rod-red top hat could best Millennium Force as the icon of Cedar Point’s skyline. From every angle, it’s a landmark; the world’s tallest and fastest roller coaster; the first and only to race past the unthinkable 400-foot height barrier; the apex of the Coaster Wars.


Image: Joel A. Rogers, CoasterGallery.com (Used with permission)

It all begins along the park’s mid-century midway. There – where Arrow’s Corkscrew was the first coaster to feature three inversions, and where Arrow’s Gemini once left riders shook with its 100-foot height – a new, sleek, flag-lined station gives onlookers a glimpse into the eyes of guests as they shuffle into hot rod trains and roll out into the sun and parks before a grandstand of metal bleachers.

There, onlookers await with baited breath and cameras poised to capture the moment… The track hisses as the train rolls back into place… A race light illuminates red… And…

Image: Joel A. Rogers, CoasterGallery.com (Used with permission)

You know, with rides like this, sometimes it’s better not to watch, but to pull off the Band-aid and just get in line. The entrance to Top Thrill Dragster is further up that straightaway, so chances are that you’ll pass directly beneath a train as it accelerates by, peeling up and racing skyward. The queue is simple – a series of switchbacks nestled between the ride’s launch and brake, perhaps making you feel like you’re part of the pit crew.

But as you draw closer and closer to the station, the reality of that number – 120 miles per hour in four seconds – sets in. Sure, you’ve probably been on a launched coaster. It might’ve even been one of the industry’s newer systems, like linear induction motors that use non-contact electromagnetism to attract-and-repel trains through lined electric motors, like the park’s own Wicked Twister. But this is something new entirely.

Image: Jeremy Thompson, Flickr (license)

Sit down. Buckle up. Pull down that lap-bar, all to the tune of Republica’s “Ready To Go.” Once you’re seated, your train rolls out of the station and lumbers to a stop at the starting line. It’s a nail-biting moment, but you won’t want to bite your nails. It could happen at any second. Don’t blink. Don’t breathe. Don’t look to your left or right. Whatever you’re doing when the ride launches, you’ll be stuck doing it down the length of the straightaway. As crowds look on, cameras ready, the brakes hiss and release, the train rolling back a few inches or so. 

Underneath, a cable has attached to your dragster’s catch car. The physics and mechanics behind Top Thrill Dragster are incredibly complex, but suffice it to say that this launch system means business. 48,000 pounds of force provided by 32 hydraulic motors power a massive rotating drum that unwinds the launch cable at 9 rotations per second. And that leaves you as the subject of one of the world’s most extraordinary science experiments.

“Arms down, head back, and hold on,” a voice repeats until all riders comply. Then… you wait…

And wait…

And wait…

Eyes darting between the stop light and the tower, waiting for that red light to cascade down into a series of yellows and then, green… When will it happen?

Before you can process, it’s underway. The initial acceleration seems to happen before the sound of the tires can even reach you. Unlike the “gradual” (albeit, very quick) acceleration of electromagnetism, this calculated, synchronous release of the ride’s tension-filled launch cable is instantaneous. In an instant, you’re gone. Within four seconds, the 17 ton train is traveling 120 miles per hour, practically levitating over the track as wind-whipping, chest-pressing pressure bolts riders into their seats. This is the equivalent of jumping to lightspeed; a sustained, steady acceleration you feel in your soul.

Image: Cedar Fair

The second the launch cable detaches, the train blasts upward, pulling up into a vertical track with a 90-degree spiral twist that aligns riders with the crest of the top hat. The seconds spent here – 420 feet over Lake Erie – make Millennium Force look like a kiddie coaster. But there’s no time to sightsee. Tipping over the top-hats half-way point, the train dives vertically, plunging through a 270-degree spinning spiral (above) before aligning once more with terra firma. The 400 foot, 112 mph plunge at last aligns with a horizontal straightaway, and in a flash, the train careens beneath the Finish Line marquee.

Fom launch to deceleration, Top Thrill Dragster is just 17 seconds of high-octane insanity. And though calmer heads will eventually prevail, in those elated moments when the train pulls into the unload area, you’d be forgiven for believing that that 17 second ride is perhaps the best roller coaster on Earth – an undeniable experience that every thrillseeker should put atop their “bucket lists.” 

Image: Joel A. Rogers, CoasterGallery.com (Used with permission)

Top Thrill Dragster was the tallest, fastest roller coaster on Earth – and by nature of its design, a one-of-a-kind ride experience. For that alone, it’s no surprise that the ride earned rave reviews and instantly became a must-ride icon of the Coaster Wars. In other words, it worked. Cedar Point’s record-breaking ride – requiring the invention of the 400-foot “stratocoaster” moniker – was the “Would you or wouldn’t you?” across news stations and water coolers; the coaster equivalent of Survivor

In fact, about the only person who didn’t want to talk about Top Thrill Dragster was Dick Kinzel. Just as Oppenheimer regretted his role as the “father of the atomic bomb,” Kinzel seemed to have recognized that at his behest, the Coaster Wars had officially gone too far. How so? Read on…

 
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Comments

Top Thrill was awesome. Hate to see it go. Millenium is the best coaster at the Point, but the best in the world is no doubt Fury 325. No one asked me, so I know....

Top thrill dragster is a cool ride, lots of speed, but nothing really too incredible. Mellinium Force, and Maverick and to a degree the Magnum are really better rides than Top Thrill Dragster, oh and you can't forget Steel Vengeance. I would be more upset if they got rid of The Maverick, then Top Thrill.....now Iron Dragon...that's a coaster that can go!

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