Jackdude101 Posted October 8, 2013 Posted October 8, 2013 Mine: A steel-track roller coaster with no inversions, no launches, no vertical lift hills, and a minimum top speed of 100 kph (62.14 mph). The following list contains all of the operating roller coasters in the world that qualify under this definition: Steel Dragon 2000 - Nagashima Spa Land Millennium Force - Cedar Point Leviathan - Canada's Wonderland Intimidator 305 - Kings Dominion Fujiyama - Fuji-Q Highland Shambhala: Expedición al Himalaya - PortAventura Titan - Six Flags Over Texas Diamondback - Kings Island Intimidator - Carowinds Behemoth - Canada's Wonderland Desperado - Buffalo Bill's Resort & Casino Silver Star - Europa-Park Nitro - Six Flags Great Adventure Superman: el Último Escape - Six Flags Mexico Big One - Pleasure Beach, Blackpool Goliath - Six Flags Magic Mountain Magnum XL-200 - Cedar Point Wild Thing - Valleyfair Mamba - Worlds of Fun & Oceans of Fun Steel Force - Dorney Park & Wildwater Kingdom Bizarro - Six Flags New England Thunder Dolphin - Tokyo Dome City Ride of Steel - Darien Lake Superman: Ride of Steel - Six Flags America Raging Bull - Six Flags Great America Bandit - Yomiuriland Goliath - Six Flags Over Georgia Skyrush - Hersheypark Titan V - Space World Apollo's Chariot - Busch Gardens Williamsburg New Texas Giant - Six Flags Over Texas Phantom's Revenge - Kennywood Goliath - La Ronde Expedition GeForce - Holiday Park Goliath - Walibi Holland Steel Eel - SeaWorld San Antonio
ernierocker Posted October 8, 2013 Posted October 8, 2013 (edited) Actually, there is a clear definition of what a Hypercoaster is. It is a coaster with a height between 200 and 299 feet. Over 300 feet is referred to as a gigacoaster. Your definition is correct except that it is defined by height, not speed. Not really any reason to continue this thread... Edited October 8, 2013 by ernierocker
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