SourceBusch Gardens Williamsburg said:RIDE TYPE: Suspended, steel roller coaster
THEME: "The Big Bad Wolf" marked a new generation in family thrill rides as an adventure in free-flight sensation. Suspended from an over-head track, riders travel seemingly out-of-control through a recently deserted Bavarian village. The spirit of the wolf is present at every turn, from the distant howls at the boarding station to the authentically detailed buildings and swinging gates.
TRACK LENGTH: 2,800 feet
MAXIMUM SPEED: 48 mph
MAXIMUM SPEED ANGLE: 110 feet
RIDE TIME: Approximately 3 minutes 30 seconds
DROPS: #1 -- 59 feet, 6 inches #2 -- 98 feet, 8 inches
LIFTS: #1 -- 60 feet #2 -- 76 feet, 7 inches
CARS: Three trains, seven cars each, four passengers per car
RIDE CAPACITY: 1,600 passengers per hour
OPENED: June 1984
LOCATION: Five-acre site in the Oktoberfest section of the park, near the bridge to Italy
DEVELOPER: Arrow Huss, Inc., Campbell, Calif.
ENGINEER: Busch Entertainment Corporation
DESIGNER: Peckham, Guyton, Albers & Viets, Inc. St. Louis, Mo.
SLC Headache said:Killing the Wolf just set Bolt up to disappoint. If they still had the Wolf for the 42" crowd, they could have put Bolt in Drachen's place, and not held back on the intensity.
If the 25-year "end of service life" really was the whole reason, then Iron Dragon ('87), Ninja ('88), Vampire ('90), and Vortex ('91) would all be gone by now, and the Bat ('93) would be gone after this year. Ninja was easily top 5 at Magic Mountain for me. Vampire and Vortex are my main reasons for even considering UK and Canada trips.sereniv said:SLC Headache said:Killing the Wolf just set Bolt up to disappoint. If they still had the Wolf for the 42" crowd, they could have put Bolt in Drachen's place, and not held back on the intensity.
super offtopic and i'm sorry if me asking is annoying--wasn't BBW closed because of a combination of "ride popularity" and not being able to afford new parts? (because they weren't being manufactured anymore)
SLC Headache said:If the 25-year "end of service life" really was the whole reason, then Iron Dragon ('87), Ninja ('88), Vampire ('90), and Vortex ('91) would all be gone by now, and the Bat ('93) would be gone after this year.
Nicole said:It is worth mentioning that the park's official claim on the Roller Coaster Insider Tour was not that it had hit a specific expiration date, but that it had simply become too expensive to maintain.
Nicole said:I would also note that despite the outrage that continues even to this day about its being closed, I recall several years, when it was a walk-on, at least when I was at the park.
Zachary said:Nicole said:I would also note that despite the outrage that continues even to this day about its being closed, I recall several years, when it was a walk-on, at least when I was at the park.
Yeah, but to be fair, one could say the same of almost any of BGW's coasters. Aside from the busiest times of the year, most of BGW's coasters keep fairly short lines much of the time (especially back in the days of fantastic operations with all trains running almost all the time).
Unagi said:It was too expensive to maintain since day 1 as they were welding cracks opening week!
So kudos to the park for actually keeping it around as long they did.
CastleOSullivan said:I have heard that the park rebuilt the vast majority of the ride once or twice over the years, during the off-season. I don't really know any more details. Can anyone confirm or elaborate on this?
Unagi said:CastleOSullivan said:I have heard that the park rebuilt the vast majority of the ride once or twice over the years, during the off-season. I don't really know any more details. Can anyone confirm or elaborate on this?
I've heard this as well but I don't know any specific details. It wouldn't surprise given the constant work it needed.
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