The Ultimate Top 10
Top Ten Biggest Rollercoasters
by Jenny Aluning on January 31st, 2010 · posted in The Ultimate Top 10 list · No CommentsOkay, this list isn’t exactly related to the entertainment world of Hollywood but rollercoasters are a form of entertainment too, aren’t they? Alright, alright, that was a lame attempt at trying to tie this in to ‘entertainment’ but I hope you’ll forgive me this selfish indulgence because….I LOVE rollercoasters and when I found this list, I couldn’t resist! My favourite so far is the ‘Raging Bull’ at Six Flags Great America in Gurnee, Illinois with a vertical drop of just over 200 feet. The physics of the ride had been meticulously worked out so that the only thing keeping you in your seat is a lap restraint!!!! This means that at some points on the ride, your butt lifts a fraction off the seat and you get the sensation of flying!! It’s a wild sensation!! Anyway, here are the Top Ten Biggest (‘Biggest’ refers strictly to vertical drop) Rollercoasters in the world so far.
10. Fujiyama (FujiYoshida-shi, Yamanashi, Japan)
Photo source: Coaster Force
Just barely larger than the world’s biggest wooden frame coaster, Fujiyama builds the thrill with speed, hitting 81 mph (130km/h) at maximum velocity. Hanging on tight and screaming, you drop 230 feet in Fujiyama’s biggest descent. Riders are warned that sitting in the back means a few bruises. But, Fujiyama confirms “biggest” does not translate to best, because Fuji-Q Highlands visitors rank Fujiyama only third among the park’s eight roller-coasters.
9. Goliath (Valencia, California, USA)
Photo source: Ultimate Rollercoaster
Southern California tourists often overlook “Magic Mountain,” home of Goliath. The locals will tell you, though, for pure roller-coaster thrills and chills, Magic Mountain totally outclasses all the other major SoCal attractions. Goliath was once the world’s longest drop, and still deserves a respected place among the best. With a maximum speed of 85 mph (137km/h) and a maximum drop of 255 feet, Goliath has the right stuff to make you feel deliciously dizzy and disoriented. Goliath also features an underground tunnel, which intensifies the psychological effect of ascending and dropping.
8. Titan (Arlington, Texas, USA)
Photo source: Coaster Gallery
One of four “Six Flags” roller coasters on this list, Titan very closely resembles Goliath at Magic Mountain. Not a big surprise, because the same designer developed both. Like Goliath, Titan includes a tunnel, and the carts hurtle along the roller-coaster highest elevation, hitting the drop suddenly. Titan drops you nearly 300 feet, reaching a maximum speed of nearly 90 mph (145km/h). Better, it drops you down the steepest grade gravity and physics will allow. Translation: maximum “g” force.
7. Intimidator 305 (under construction, Virginia, USA)
Photo source: About.com
When it opens in Spring, 2010, Intimidator will drop thrill-seekers 300 feet at 90 mph. New engineering and construction techniques enable an 85-degree drop—by far the steepest vertical drop in roller coaster history. Repeated laboratory tests have proven the ride is safe; scientists have not yet figured out how to test for terrifying.
6. Millennium Force (Sandusky, Ohio, USA)
Photo source: Coaster Gallery
Millennium Force maximizes the motion, taking riders to an intermediate summit and a series of whoop-tee-doos before lifting them to the highest elevation and dropping them 300 feet at 93 mph (150km/h). More than a mile long, the ride includes two tunnels and a lot of tight curves. Millennium Force once ranked #1 among the world’s complete-circuit roller coasters for both height and speed. It still ranks among the world’s best for sheer exhilaration.
5. Steel Dragon 2000 (Nagashima, Mie, Japan)
Photo source: Coaster Gallery
Modified and re-certified after three years out of service because of a serious accident in 2003. Stretching 8133 feet and taking riders through two tunnels, Dragon drops riders more than 300 feet at 95 mph (153km/h). Recent riders say the safety modifications have had no effect on Dragon’s excitement and thrills, and park operators express confidence they will not see a repeat of their 2003 disaster.
4. Tower of Terror (Coomera, Queensland, Australia)
Photo source: Dreamworld Official Website
TOT’s official classification tells its story—“reverse freefall.” No loops, no twists and turns; purely vertical, but still qualified as a “complete circuit,” TOT features an LSM launch and rockets you from zero to 100 mph in just seven seconds. Combine the heart-in-throat, g-force thrills of all the coasters in the list so far, and you get half of TOT’s exhilaration. Even veteran coasteristos will feel their knees wobbling as they stagger off of Tower of Terror. The ride lasts only 28 seconds, dropping riders 328 feet; it only feels like an eternity.
3. Superman, The Escape (Valencia, California, USA)
Photo source: Coaster Gallery
Another Magic Mountain entry and more living proof that the park rocks Southern California. Designed and built by Intamin, the same architects and engineers who delivered the Tower of Terror to Queensland, Superman works on the same “steel reverse freefall” design. Like TOT, Superman lifts you slowly and then drops you at what feels like light speed; you fall 328 feet. This half-minute of your life surely will remain in memory for a lifetime.
2. Top Thrill Dragster (Sandusky, Ohio, USA)
Photo source: Coaster Gallery
Another qualifier from Cedar Point, which clearly goes higher and faster than Magic Mountain, out-dropping and out-thrilling those west coast wanna-be’s every day of the year. Also an Intamin design built on the same premises as the Australian and SoCal models, but upgraded to the “steel rocket” class, and designed to go up and over instead of simply up and down. Intamin powered-up the hydraulic launch and increased the drop for maximum terror-per-meter. You probably thought zero to 100 in seven seconds represented the ultimate speed thrill, but that little milestone was Intamin’s warm-up for the genuine thrill—zero to 120 mph in just four seconds. A total vertical drop of 400 feet, and more sheer terror than rollercoaster amateurs can endure in half-a-minute.
1. Kingda Ka (Jackson, New Jersey, USA)
Photo source: Coaster Force
The state of Intamin’s art: 418 feet at 128 mph. Yes, it has lovely landscaping and the hint of a theme, but really Kingda Ka is all about cheek-wobbling, eyeball-shaking speed. It uses a hydraulic launch mechanism that has a motor capable of producing 20,800 horsepower. It accelerates the train to 128 miles per hour (206 km/h) in 3.5 seconds, subjecting riders to about 1.7 g’s. The ride lasts 28 seconds from the start of the launch to the end of the brakes. The track is 3,118 feet (950 m) long.
























