Alpine Bobsled

Alpine Bobsled
Location The Great Escape & Splashwater Kingdom
Park section Fest Area
Status Operating
Opened 1984
Type Steel
Manufacturer Intamin
Model Bobsled roller coaster
Height 64 ft (20 m)
Length 1,490 ft (450 m)
Max speed 37 mph (60 km/h)
Inversions 0
Duration 1 min. 40 sec.
Height restriction 3 ft 6 in (107 cm)
Alpine Bobsled at RCDB
Pictures of Alpine Bobsled at RCDB
Amusement Parks Portal

Alpine Bobsled is a steel roller coaster of bobsled design. It has been at three places:

Contents

Theming

The alpine theme of the coaster was partly inspired by the park's proximity to Lake Placid New York where the 1980 and 1932 Winter Olympics, both of which included bobsled races, were held. The ride has four cars, all themed from different countries: the United States, Canada, Italy, and Jamaica. A large archway is the entrance to the long queue area leading up to the loading station. The arch itself is decorated with an old Olympic-style bobsled and the path up to the loading area is scattered with old broken sleds as well. The loading station is built to resemble an 19th century alpine ski lodge. The outside of the bobsled's trough is purple and white, with the inside also being white.

History

The coaster was built in 1984 and was located at Six Flags Great Adventure as the Sarajevo Bobsled. The ride was quite popular. Its purpose was to commemorate the 1984 Olympics. The area of the park was becoming dull and needed an overhaul.

In the spring of 1988, it was determined that this area would have an Airplane/Space/Boardwalk theme, and that the park needed a larger roller coaster, and that the coaster would occupy the land that Sarajevo Bobsleds was occupying. The Bobsled was then closed mid season and dismantled. The coaster was replaced with a multiple steel looping roller coaster that was then state of the art and would for a month be the tallest coaster in the world. The Great American Scream Machine was built in its place, and it stood there until it was dismantled in July of the 2010 season[1]. The area has now been confirmed to be the new home of Chang, a coaster that was at Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom until 2009.[2]

After the ride was dismantled and removed, it was relocated to Six Flags Great America in 1989 and in 1990 opened as Rolling Thunder.

It was replaced by Raging Bull, a state of the art steel hyper twister non-looping coaster. Rolling Thunder was then sold to Premier Parks and then moved to Great Escape in 1997.

It reopened in 1998 as the Alpine Bobsled. Premiere Parks bought Six Flags in 1998 bringing Great Escape into and this coaster back to the Six Flags family.

Ride experience

Riders are arranged two across in four rows per car. Since each car travels individually and contains only eight riders, the Alpine Bobsled's wait times can sometimes be long.

References