Mammoth | |
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Location | Holiday World & Splashin' Safari |
Area | Splashin' Safari |
Status | Under construction |
Cost | US$9,000,000 |
Opening date | May 11, 2012 |
Type | Water coaster |
Manufacturer | ProSlide Technology |
Model | HydroMagnetic Rocket |
Course layout | Custom |
Lift/launch system | Conveyor belt lift hill and 6 uphill launches powered by linear induction motors |
Height | 69 ft (21 m) |
Drop | 32 ft (9.8 m) |
Length | 1,763 ft (537 m) |
Max vertical angle | 45° |
Capacity | 1,080 riders per hour |
Height restriction | 3 ft 6 in (107 cm) |
Boats | 10 boats. Riders are arranged 6 across in 1 row(s) for a total of 6 riders per boat. |
Single rider line available | |
Must transfer from wheelchair |
Mammoth is a water coaster currently under construction at Holiday World & Splashin' Safari in Santa Claus, Indiana, USA. It was designed and built beginning in 2011 by ProSlide Technology; it will open on May 11, 2012. Mammoth is named after the now-extinct mammal, keeping with the water park's safari theme. When it is completed in 2012, Mammoth will become the world's longest water coaster at 1,763 feet (537 m) long. It will claim that title from Holiday World's first water coaster, Wildebeest, which is 1,710 feet (520 m) long.
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On August 3, 2011, Holiday World & Splashin' Safari announced Mammoth, a ProSlide HydroMagnetic Mammoth that was to be built to the east of Wildebeest. Unlike Wildebeest, which uses 4-passenger, toboggan-style boats, Mammoth will use 6-passenger, Clover-Wheel boats. Another unique feature of Mammoth is its length. When completed, the water coaster will be 1,763 feet (537 m) long, making it the longest coaster in the world.[1]
Mammoth is scheduled to open on May 11, 2012. When the HydroMagnetic water coaster opens, it will operate with ten 6-passenger boats. The riders in each boat will be seated in a circle, facing each other. At the time, Mammoth will be the only water coaster to utilize these round, 6-passenger boats.[1]
Mammoth will use ten 6-passenger boats. In each boat, riders are seated in a circle facing each other. Each seat has individual seat backs and two handles to hold on with, one on the rider's left and one on the rider's right. To allow the linear induction motors to interact with the boats and propel them uphill, a magnetic metal plate is attached to the underside of every boat.[2]
The track on Mammoth is made out of numerous pieces of molded, red, yellow, and blue fiberglass supported by concrete pillars. The total length of the track is 1,763 feet (537 m) and includes seven drops, with the largest being 32 feet (9.8 m). The track features a conveyor belt lift hill as well as six linear induction motors that propel the boats back uphill, including the largest LIM on a water coaster.[2]
The technology on HydroMagnetic Rockets utilizes linear induction motors (LIMs) to propel boats uphill. An alternating magnetic field beneath the slide surface interacts with magnets mounted on the underside of each boat to push them uphill smoothly and quickly. Because the magnetic field under the slide surface needs power in order to be activated, boats will not be able to make it uphill in the case of a power outage. In that case, all of the boats throughout the course will rollback, causing each boat to valley at the bottom of a hill. LIM technology is commonly used on launched roller coasters.[3]
The total ride time on Mammoth is yet to be determined. It will be determined once the construction of the ride is complete and testing has begun in the spring of 2012.[3]
The ride begins with riders facing away from Bakuli. After dispatch, the boat travels up a slight incline where it waits until there is adequate spacing between it and the boat in front of it. When the ride's system has determined there is adequate spacing between the boats, the boat moves forward and onto the conveyor belt lift hill. While on the lift hill, riders will pass under one of the ride's drops and over two of its inclines. At the top of the lift hill, the boat moves from the conveyor belt onto the fiberglass. At this point the boat makes a right turn before entering the ride's initial 32 feet (9.8 m) drop at a 45° angle. Following the descent, the boat is rocketed back uphill by the first of six linear induction motors. The boat crests the hill and makes a left turn, in preparation for a dropping, right-hand, hairpin turn. At the bottom of the dropping hairpin turn, the boat is sent uphill for a second time before making another descent.[4]
At the bottom of the third drop the boat passes under the lift hill and is launched uphill a third time. The boat turns left before it drops down under the lift hill. At this point the boat glides uphill and into a left-hand, 270° turn. The boat then travels downhill before going back uphill, this time over the lift hill. After going down hill and uphill one more time, the boat enters a right-turning helix. Once the boat has navigated the helix, it makes a left turn before dropping a final time. At the conclusion of the drop it makes a left turn to line up with the end-of-the-ride conveyor belt. The final conveyor belt brings the boat into the station, at which time riders unload.[4]
Mammoth operates with water and in heavily-wooded areas. Due to these factors, Mammoth closes when there is lightning or high wind in Holiday World's immediate area.[5]
In addition to weather conditions, some riders may be prohibited from boarding. Although there is no age limit, riders must be at least 42 inches (110 cm) tall to ride Mammoth when accompanied by an adult who is 18 years of age or older. To ride unaccompanied, riders must be at least 48 inches (120 cm) tall. In addition, there is a weight limit of 1,080 pounds (490 kg) per boat. Due to this restriction, some riders may be required to split up. All riders must abide by Splashin' Safari's dress code, which includes wearing modest swimwear or clothing, in order to ride. In addition, riders must leave all loose items in the station; riders who refuse to leave their loose items in the station will not be permitted to ride.[2]
Each year, Holiday World & Splashin' Safari, in coordination with the Easter Seals Rehabilitation Center of Southwestern Indiana, publishes an accessibility guide for guests with disabilities. It is recommended, though not necessarily required, that all guests with the following conditions refrain from riding Mammoth:[6]
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