Suspended Swinging Coaster

Description
Track has a tubular steel spine, connected to the inside edges of tubular steel running rails. Supports are large tubular steel posts. Trains hang underneath the track, swinging freely from a chassis held on by wheels above, below and outside the running rails.

Special Track Elements

 * Helix

Constraints

 * Maximum Track Slope - 60°
 * Maximum Lift Hill Slope - 25°
 * Maximum Height - 105 Feet

Vehicles

 * Suspended Swinging Cars
 * Suspended Swinging Airplane Cars
 * Suspended Swinging Floorless Cars (RCT2 And RCT3 only)
 * 1950's Rocket Ride
 * Football Ride
 * Gorilla Ride
 * Sloth Ride
 * Seaplane Ride

Operating Modes

 * Continuous circuit mode
 * Continuous block section mode

Build menu only

 * Flight of the Phoenix

Scenarios

 * Force Nine (Ivory Towers)
 * Cathexis (Adrenaline Heights)
 * Roller Coaster 4 (Volcania)
 * Roller Coaster 1 (Dragon's Cove)
 * Vampire (Megaworld Park)

Build menu only

 * Flight of the Phoenix
 * Hairyplanes
 * Pendulator
 * Pylon Peril
 * Regurgitator
 * Swither

Scenarios

 * Ninja (Six Flags Magic Mountain)
 * Suspended Swinging Coaster 1 (Renovation)

RollerCoaster Tycoon 3

 * High Flyer (Vanilla Hills)

Other Information

 * A good Suspended Roller Coaster requires plenty of curves and helixes to provide the high lateral G's required to swing the cars.

In Real Life
The Suspended Swinging Coaster is based on Arrow's original suspended coaster design. This was the first instance of the Inverted Roller Coasters now popular among many parks around the world. It was first introduced in the 1980's as a prototype built by Arrow Dynamics with cars that swing around curves. Vekoma and B&M presently build inverted roller coasters with inversions and stationary cars.

The floorless vehicles for the coaster are based on Vekoma's suspended floorless vehicles manufactured for both their own designs and for pre-existing Arrow models. These trains are perhaps most famously seen on Vampire at Chessington World of Adventures.