Harman Patil (Editor)

Kong (roller coaster)

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Status
  
Operating

Closing date
  
1997

Height
  
35 m

Opened
  
1998

Opening date
  
May 1998 (1998-05)

Type
  
Steel – Inverted

Max speed
  
80 km/h

Height restriction
  
1.37 m

Kong (roller coaster)

Status
  
Relocated to Six Flags Discovery Kingdom

Opening date
  
May 1, 1995 (1995-05-01)

Address
  
1001 Fairgrounds Dr, Vallejo, CA 94589, USA

Similar
  
Medusa, Tsunami, Superman: Ultimate Flight, V2: Vertical Velocity, Roar

Kong is a steel Suspended Looping Coaster, made by Vekoma, located at Six Flags Discovery Kingdom in Vallejo, California.

Contents

Opryland USA

Kong was previously located at the now-defunct Opryland USA theme park in Nashville, Tennessee where it was known as The Hangman. Opened in May 1995, the ride was notably the last major attraction to be added to Opryland before the park closed at the end of the 1997 season.

The Hangman was located in the American West area of the park, in an area formerly occupied by the Tin Lizzies antique car ride. Upon Opryland's closure, The Hangman was disassembled and sold to Premier Parks. Soon afterwards it was relocated and rebuilt at Six Flags Discovery Kingdom as Kong after Premier Parks acquired the Six Flags chain.

Six Flags Discovery Kingdom

Kong debuted at The New Marine World Theme Park, later Six Flags Discovery Kingdom, on Memorial Day Weekend of 1998. At that time Kong became the tallest and longest inverted roller coaster in Northern California, missing the speed record by .3 miles per hour (0.48 km/h) and achieving the length record by only 6 inches (15 cm). Today, V2: Vertical Velocity and Medusa, hold the height and speed records in Discovery Kingdom and Northern California.

Kong previously loaded near the iWerks theater (Also known as the "Dino Sphere"). In 2007, the park moved the attraction's entrance to Oasis Plaza. Guests now walk under the ride to get to the loading platform.

Ride experience

Kong starts with a 115-foot (35 m) lift hill. Followed by that is a 108-foot (33 m) drop, a heartline loop, sidewinder, and back to back inline twists. Despite dislike from the coaster enthusiast community for this type of coaster, Kong is typically one of the busiest coasters in the park and well liked by park guests. SLC coasters are commonly referred to as "Hang-and-Bang" coasters by enthusiasts, referring to your head hitting the over the shoulder restraints during the ride.

References

Kong (roller coaster) Wikipedia