I would say the 'Ghoster Coaster'. It was once Scooby Doo's Haunted Mansion, and is a great ride for younger children.
Riders on the Leviathan roller coaster at Canada's Wonderland must be at least 54 inches (137 cm) tall to ride.
A hyper-coaster is a large roller coaster that has a lift hill height of at least 200 feet. A giga-coaster is larger, with a lift hill of at least 300 feet.
To ride the roller coaster at the amusement park, you must be at least 4 feet and 4 inches tall.
You need an engineering degree at the very least.
The little gator one for 2 year olds that goes around in a circle.
All roller coasters have at least one hill and one drop. Most roller coasters also have turns as well. Inversions (going upside down) is typical on steel coasters and rare on wooden ones. Their is always some way to start a roller coaster, a chain or hydraulic launch systems are some. Brakes are on every roller coaster as well.
I'm still not sure what it is, but it would have to have at least a 200'drop and 6-7 inversions.
To ride Kraken you have to be at least 4 ft 6 in (54 in or 137 cm).
don't ride a roller coaster if you are pregnant. Doesn't matter how far along!! Probably nothing would happen and you would be quite safe at least until 3 months, but if anything did happen you would blame yourself.
At the tallest point on the track. Potential energy is given by U(Which is potential energy) = mass times height time gravitational constant. You can't change the gravitational constant, or the mass of the roller coaster car. So you have to change the height. PE=mgh so more the height and the mass the more PE
i remember when i first fell off a roller coaster At least 200,000.
I know about one wooden roller coaster that's been around since I was born, it's in Kema Texas, at the Kema boardwalk, and last but not least, it's called the boardwalk bullet.