Magnum XL-200

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Magnum XL-200
Magnum1 CP.JPG
Riders cresting a hill on Magnum XL-200
Location Cedar Point
Type Steel
Status Open
Opened May 6, 1989
Manufacturer Arrow Dynamics
Designer Ron Toomer
Model Hyper coaster
Track layout Out and Back
Lift/launch system Chain lift hill
Height 205 ft (62 m)
Drop 195 ft (59 m)
Length 5,106 ft (1,556 m)
Max speed 72 mph (116 km/h)
Inversions 0
Duration 2:02
Max vertical angle 60°
Capacity 2000 riders per hour
Cost US$ 8,000,000
Height restriction 4 ft 0 in (122 cm)
Magnum XL-200 at RCDB
Pictures of Magnum XL-200 at RCDB

Magnum XL-200 is an Arrow Dynamics steel hypercoaster located at Cedar Point in Sandusky, Ohio. Built in 1989, it was the first complete circuit roller coaster to break the 200 foot barrier. It is considered to have started the roller coaster wars, in which amusement parks competed to build the highest and fastest roller coasters.

Contents

[edit] Details

Magnum XL-200 is classified a hypercoaster as well as an out and back roller coaster: the first three hills take riders out (away from the station). After a high-speed pretzel turn, the train then races back through a series of tunnels and small airtime hills.

When Magnum XL-200 opened, it did not have up-stop wheels. Instead, it used pads, similar to those used on Gemini (in fact, Gemini still uses the up-stop pads). Shortly after its debut, however, regular, more-traditional up-stop wheels were added to the trains.[1] Cedar Fair, LP CEO Dick Kinzel has been quoted as saying he was one of the few to ride Magnum XL-200's first train, boarding the train after only one test cycle. Over its entire history, Magnum has only been repainted once. The original color was scarlet red. Painting to moly orange started in 2005 and was completed in 2006; hence, for a period of time, Magnum operated with two different colors.[2] The name Magnum stems from the Latin root for large.[3]

Magnum XL-200 has been the target of false rumors claiming that the structure was sinking due to unstable ground and that plans were to disassemble the ride and sell it to either a Japanese theme park, or a Six Flags park. This rumor supposedly started as an April Fools Day joke in an Ohio newspaper, but quickly spread via the Internet. Cedar Point has quickly denounced such rumors.[4]

[edit] Accident

On May 26, 2007 one of the coaster's trains collided with another at less than 10 miles per hour (16 km/h), causing minor damage to both trains and minor injuries to at least three passengers. Two people were taken to a First Aid Station, and a third person was taken to a local hospital because of an asthma attack. No one was seriously injured. Fifty-nine people were aboard the two trains. The ride reopened the next day, on May 27, and park spokesman Robin Innes said the accident was caused by rain: "We think it was just caused by excessive moisture on the tracks due to the heavy rain storms we had in the morning".[5]

[edit] Awards and rankings

Magnum XL-200 is classified as an ACE Coaster Landmark.[6]

Golden Ticket Awards: Top Steel Roller Coasters[7][8][9]
Year 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Ranking
1
1
1
3
3
4
3
3
3
5
7
9
Mitch Hawker's Internet Poll: Best Steel-Tracked Roller Coaster
Year 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008
Ranking
11
n/a[10]
13
19
24
33
44
65
46
78
NAPHA Survey: Favorite Steel Roller Coaster[11]
Year 2005 2006 2007 2008
Ranking
2
2
3
3

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Preceded by
Dragon Mountain
World's Tallest Complete Circuit Roller Coaster
May 1989–May 1994
Succeeded by
Desperado
Preceded by
Bandit
World's Fastest Roller Coaster
May 1989–May 1991
Succeeded by
Steel Phantom


Coordinates: 41°29′7.25″N 82°41′10″W / 41.4853472°N 82.68611°W / 41.4853472; -82.68611

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