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This could be the best roller coaster in Florida ⁠— and beyond

  • September 12, 2019
  • Travel

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  • This artist's rendering shows SeaWorld San Antonio's forthcoming Turtle Reef attraction.1 of 7
  • SeaWorld San Diego's new Electric Eel roller coaster opened in 2018.2 of 7
  • SeaWorld Orlando is adding a Sesame Street-themed area, pictured here in an artist's rendering.3 of 7
  • Manta rollercoaster at SeaWorld Orlando.4 of 7
  • Infinity Falls at SeaWorld Orlando.5 of 7
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  • The Wave Coaster at SeaWorld San Antonio7 of 7

Florida’s newest, most exciting roller coasters of 2020 are coming from an unlikely suspect, as theme parks go: SeaWorld Parks Entertainment.

On Thursday, the parent company of the park once known for its trained dolphins announced two major new roller coasters for next year: Busch Gardens Tampa’s 10th, Iron Gwazi; and SeaWorld Orlando’s sixth, Ice Breaker. 

Along with recent and upcoming additions at other parks in the chain, the new coasters would seem to indicate an evolution in the company’s strategy. It’s moving  away from live animal attractions toward thrilling rides.

“When we build roller coasters, we do them a little differently,” says Jonathan Smith, director of rides and engineering for SeaWorld Parks. “We try to integrate them with the causes that we care about, such as animal care, conservation and education.”

For instance, Ice Breaker will be near SeaWorld’s Wild Arctic exhibit and share a similar theme, promoting conservation issues related to the Arctic and the ocean. The more menacing Iron Gwazi at Busch Gardens will draw its inspiration from a creature endemic to Florida: the crocodile.

Iron Gwazi: Meet America’s newest hyperhybrid

Iron Gwazi is “going to be the best roller coaster in Florida,” Smith brags.  “We’re building what could be one of the best coasters in the entire world.”

Whether the ride achieves those superlatives remains to be seen, but Iron Gwazi at Busch Gardens Tampa is assured of two others: At 206 feet and 76 mph, it will be the tallest and fastest coaster in the Sunshine State. Its height also moves it past Cedar Point’s 205-foot Steel Vengeance to become the tallest hybrid wood-steel coaster in North America. (Technically, it will be a hyperhybrid, the term given to wood-steel coasters over 200 feet.)

Another reason to be hopeful: Iron Gwazi is being built – OK, technically converted from an old twin-track to a single-track design – by Rocky Mountain Construction. The Idaho company has earned a stellar reputation by taking rough wooden coasters well past their prime, rethinking their wooden-structure layouts and trading out old wooden tracks for steel. The end product? Wood-steel hybrid rides that are remarkably smooth and compelling.

Many of the company’s reimagined hybrids – including Steel Vengeance – have vaulted onto fan-favorite lists. So hopes are high that Iron Gwazi – set to become the tallest and fastest and deliver the steepest drop (206 feet at 91 degrees) in the hybrid category – will also be the best of its kind.

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  • To roller coaster fans, Ohios Cedar Point is thrill1 of 11
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The mad scientist behind Iron Gwazi and all of RMC’s hybrid coasters is structural engineer Alan Schilke, whom owner and CEO Fred Grubb lauds as “probably the best (roller coaster) designer in the world.”

Together, Schilke and Grubb created RMC’s all-steel “IBox” track-and-wheel system, which has answered the prayers of park operators tired of constantly having to replace tracks on their old wooden coasters. In addition to being easier on their maintenance budgets, IBox gives parks the option of utilizing existing wooden structures rather than tearing them down and starting from scratch. (Grubb estimates that RMC will retain about 40% of the original wooden structure from the original Gwazi, which opened in 1999 and closed in 2015.)

It also allows designers the freedom to implement thrills typically only seen on steel coasters. Iron Gwazi’s 4,075-foot-long, 110-second course, will include overbanked twists and turns and 12 moments of airtime, the giddy sensation that momentarily lifts coaster passengers out of their seats. And did we mention the inversions? Among the three heels-over-head elements will be a zero-G roll and a 180-degree stall that will keep riders flopped upside down for a few harrowing seconds as they race forward.

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  • At 114 feet, Kumba at Busch Gardens Tampa boasts one of coasterdom's tallest vertical loops. It also features interlocking corkscrews and a zero-Groll.1 of 14
  • Although Scream at Six Flags Magic Mountain and Bizarro at Six Flags Great Adventure (shown here) have different names, the coasters share a similar layout. Their elements include cobra rolls, a double inversion that resembles the head of a snake, as well as interlocking corkscrews.2 of 14
  • Steel Curtain, which is slated to open this season at Kennywood in Pittsburgh, will be themed to the hometown NFL heroes and will be located in a new section of the park called Steelers Country.3 of 14
  • Rising 220 feet and hitting a top speed of 76 mph, Steel Curtain will deliver a wild ride.4 of 14
  • Steel Curtain's nine inversions will give Kennywood bragging rights for having the coaster with the most topsy-turvy elements in North America.5 of 14
  • Introduced in 2014, the Banshee at Kings Island in Mason, Ohio,holds the record for the world's longest inverted coaster (in which the trains are suspended beneath the track), giving it plenty of opportunities to throw riders for a loop.6 of 14
  • Banshee's inversions include a zero-Groll, which delivers a brief burst of weightlessness, and a dive loop, which simulates a stunt plane maneuver.7 of 14
  • You don't have to wait long to twist and shout on Hydra at Dorney Park in Allentown, Pennsylvania, since one of its seven inversions, called a Jojo roll, occurs as soon as the train leaves the station. Among the floorless coaster's other elements is a heartline roll, which spins riders on an axis roughly in line with their (rapidly beating) hearts.8 of 14
  • Medusa at Six Flags Discovery Kingdom in Vallejo, California, is the first coaster to feature a sea serpent roll, which combines two flip-flopping maneuvers.9 of 14
  • Medusa also has a 128-foot-high vertical loop.10 of 14
  • Krakenat SeaWorld Orlando soars 149 feet tall, cranks up to 65 mph and unleashes one inversion after another, including a dive loop and a cobra roll.11 of 14
  • Montu, an inverted coaster at Busch Gardens Tampa, delivers an Immelmann loop, a half-twist and half-loop element.12 of 14
  • The Incredible Hulk Coaster at Islands of Adventure, part of Universal Orlando in Florida, features a tire-propelled launch that accelerates its trains uphill at 40 mph.13 of 14
  • Passengers emerge 110 feet in the air and immediately get tossed upside down in a zero-Groll. The big green monster also delivers a corkscrew and a couple of menacing high-in-the-sky loops.14 of 14

Iron Gwazi will have one other advantage over Steel Vengeance: a significantly lower minimum ride height of 48 inches or 4 feet, meaning that it will be open to younger coaster fans. By comparison, you have to be 52 inches or 4-foot-3 to ride the Cedar Point Coaster.  

The SeaWorld parks consider attractions with a 48-inch height requirement to be “family thrill” rides, meaning that they offer thrills, but most members of the family would be able to enjoy them.

Ice Breaker: Family thrills, just dialed down a little

Ice Breaker at SeaWorld Orlando will fall into the same 48-inch, family thrill category, albeit with dialed-down thrills.

Using linear synchronous motors, the unique coaster will feature a quadruple launch. After leaving the station, the trains will enter a track switch that will move them laterally into the launch section. They will first magnetically launch backward, then forward, then backward, and finally forward with enough momentum to hit the ride’s top speed of 52 mph and make it out of the launch area.

“What’s really cool about the launch experience is that there are camelbacks (airtime-generating hump-shaped hills) integrated into the track,” SeaWorld’s Smith says. “Passengers will experience airtime while they are launching. Airtime going backwards is very unique.”

Ice Breaker’s riders will navigate a 93-foot spike at 100 degrees, a full 10 degrees beyond vertical. They will also encounter an 80-foot top hat-shaped element that Smith says will be loaded with airtime. The coaster will be an “unusual, crazy, fun and thrilling experience,” he adds.

That’s not all, folks

In addition to the two coasters, SeaWorld’s two Florida water parks will also welcome new attractions in 2020. Riptide Race is coming to Aquatica Orlando, while Solar Vortex will debut at Adventure Island in Tampa.

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