tomahawKSU said:My question is, why do they announce it, then keep adding twists? It was announced a year and a half before it opened, so I don't see the rush to announce it since they are making changes now.
Coasterfreck said:Making it now an 8 inversion coaster!
I have a feeling they did it deliberately so that we can keep talking and promoting it, plus it makes it more fun when a theme park keeps things up their sleeves, as apposed to completly revealing the final layout and waiting for it to open._koppen said:tomahawKSU said:My question is, why do they announce it, then keep adding twists? It was announced a year and a half before it opened, so I don't see the rush to announce it since they are making changes now.
Maybe they just wanna do it differently, having people more in touch with how the project is done?
Well an inside top hat is an inversion, so that would count as the 8th inversion._koppen said:Coasterfreck said:Making it now an 8 inversion coaster!
It's still 7 inversions.
Roller Coaster Elements said:In a top hat inversion, also called an inside top hat, when the train approaches the top of the "hat", it makes a 90 degree twist so that it is on the inside of the element (hence the name), and once it reaches top hat's apex the train is upside down under the track.
so that would count as the 8th inversion.
That was not a corkscrew, It just was a Twisted Airtime Hill as this screenshot proves.CoasterfanSWE said:so that would count as the 8th inversion.
No, since they replaced the corkscrew that was previously there with the inside top hat. The layout was previously Launch 2-Twisted airtime Hill-Corkscrew, now it is Launch 2-Inside tophat-airtime hill
Coasterfreck said:That was not a corkscrew, It just was a Twisted Airtime Hill as this screenshot proves
Ethan said:^ Actually, Coasterfreck is correct. You obviously don't know the layout for the ride... It makes you look dumb.