Corkscrew Roller Coaster

Construction
Track has a tubular steel spine, connected to the outside edges of tubular steel running rails. Supports are large tubular steel posts. Trains are held on the track by wheels above, below, and inside the running rails.

Special Track Elements

 * Banked Curves
 * Vertical Loop (may need to be researched)
 * Steep Twist
 * Half Loop (may need to be researched)
 * Corkscrew
 * Banked Helix
 * On-Ride Photo
 * Zero-G Roll (RCT3 only)

Constraints

 * Banked Curves - 50° banking
 * Maximum Track Slope - 60°
 * Maximum Lift Hill Slope - 25°
 * Maximum Height - 239 Feet

Vehicles

 * Roller Coaster Train
 * Hyper Coaster Train (only if the track has no inversions; RCT1 only)

Operating Modes

 * Continuous circuit mode
 * Powered launch
 * Reversed-Inclince launched shuttle mode

Other Information
Can give a slightly rough ride, but allows the most complex track elements to be used, and can be built to a large height. In the first RollerCoaster Tycoon, a Hyper Coaster Train can be used in place of the standard train if there are no inversions in the track and if it goes at a high speed.

This ride is called Steel Corkscrew Roller Coaster in RCT1 and Corkscrew Roller Coaster in RCT2.

In Real Life
The most notable aspect of the Corkscrew Roller Coaster was how diverse the layouts could be. Arrow Dynamics is responsible for many of the Corkscrew roller coasters in the Six Flags parks featured in RCT2. The two most notable are Great American Scream Machine (Great Adventure, defunct as of Summer 2010) and Viper (Magic Mountain, still operating). Both of these rides were semi-copies of each other and were built in 1989 and 1990 respectively. Great American Scream Machine once held the records for World's Tallest, Tallest Looping and Fastest Rollercoaster in 1989 and 1990. Viper is now the world's tallest looping coaster. Compared to RCT2 though, both rides were taller than 185 ft. compared to what is stated in the game.



Arrow is credited for the inventing of the Boomerang coaster. The boomerang coaster is the most common roller coaster design in the world. Another company has built a more modern Boomerang (Vekoma is the company). Both have built boomerang roller coasters with arrow halting their production in 2001. The early Vekoma Boomerangs used Arrow trains and most of the still operating Boomerangs from both companies are now using Vekoma Trains.

Arrow Dynamics

 * Arrow is also famous for inventing and coining the term "hyper-coaster." The first Hyper Coaster was introduced in 1989 and stole the world's fastest and tallest title from Scream Machine, which opened only three months prior. Arrow's "Hyper-Coaster" sparked a huge revival in roller coasters known among enthusiasts as the "Coaster Wars." This "war" is still ongoing until this day.
 * Arrow founder Ed Morgan's son Dana Morgan was responsible for building Steel Dragon 2000 at Nagashima Spaland, the longest roller coaster in the world, which is one of only three Giga Coasters in the world. It doesn't look anything like the Intamin-style Giga coasters that are featured in RCT2 abd 3, it bears a better resemblance to the "Hyper Coaster" featured in RCT1, 2, and 3. The coaster is 8,133 ft long and is the tallest chain lift roller coaster in the world at 318 ft.