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Shockwave (Kings Dominion)

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Park section
  
Candy Apple Grove

Opening date
  
1986 (1986)

Replaced by
  
Delirium

Height
  
29 m

Max speed
  
80 km/h

Park
  
Kings Dominion

Status
  
Closed

Replaced
  
Galaxie

Closed
  
9 August 2015

Opened
  
1986

Height restriction
  
1.37 m

Shockwave (Kings Dominion) Kings Dominion39s Shockwave to Close for Good on August 9 Coaster101

Closing date
  
August 9, 2015 (2015-08-09)

Similar
  
Anaconda, Dominator, Grizzly, Rebel Yell, Volcano - The Blast

Shockwave was a stand-up roller coaster located at Kings Dominion in Doswell, Virginia. Opened in 1986, it was the third stand-up roller coaster installation built and designed by Japanese company TOGO. Following closures of the previous two, it became the oldest of its kind still in operation. After nearly thirty years in operation, Shockwave closed permanently on August 9, 2015. It was replaced by Delirium, a Mondial Revolution flat ride, which opened in 2016.

Contents

Shockwave (Kings Dominion) Shockwave at Kings Dominion The Ride of Your Life Pinterest King

History

Shockwave (Kings Dominion) Kings Dominion Shockwave

The site on which Shockwave stood was formerly home to the Galaxie roller coaster, a small steel coaster of the S.D.C. Galaxi model. However, on September 11, 1983, an incident on the coaster resulted in the fatal injury of 13-year-old Daniel Watkins. The incident was used as the primary example of unsafe rides in local press coverage of the concurrent U.S. Senate hearings on amusement ride safety and regulation. Rather than reopen the attraction, Kings Dominion dismantled and sold it, to the Myrtle Beach Pavilion where it operated until 1997 as the Galaxi.

Shockwave (Kings Dominion) httpslocaltvwtvrfileswordpresscom201507sh

To replace the Galaxie, Kings Dominion recruited Japanese manufacturer TOGO to build a stand-up roller coaster. It opened in 1986 as Shockwave. The station design is known for having a station floor that is not level, which tilts down toward the front where the train exits. This eliminates the need to propel trains as they dispatch from the station, instead relying on gravity to roll out of the station.

Shockwave (Kings Dominion) Is Kings Dominion Removing Shockwave in 2015 NOW OUTDATED YouTube

After operating for nearly 30 years and accommodating over 22 million riders, Kings Dominion announced on July 9, 2015, that Shockwave will be closing permanently on August 9, 2015. Kings Dominion Vice President Pat Jones released a statement saying, "While it’s bittersweet to say goodbye to one of our older coasters, we’re excited for what the future holds...We’re happy that Shockwave was able to provide close to three decades of memories.”

Theming

Shockwave (Kings Dominion) Shockwave OnRide Kings Dominion YouTube

The trains were painted blue with yellow restraints, and the station with natural-toned stain and paint. For the park's 25th anniversary in 2000, the entire ride was painted in non-standard scheme, neon colors. The superstructure and main rail were painted periwinkle, with the running rails alternating patches of aquamarine and orange. The trains were repainted orange, and the station in the same neon colors as the track. In 2011, Shockwave was repainted green for the tracks and teal for the supports.

Incidents

On the evening of August 23, 1999, a 20-year-old man was thrown from the train's final turn at a speed of 40 miles per hour (64 km/h) sustaining a fatal head injury upon contact with a steel walkway. Shockwave and two similar rides at other Paramount amusement parks were immediately closed. The event was originally reported as "an accident [that] resulted in the death of one park visitor," but further investigation proved otherwise. Bolstered by numerous eyewitness accounts, the cause was later attributed to the victim's disregard of park safety rules as he was seen intentionally freeing himself from restraints. In addition, an inspection found the safety restraints to be working properly at the time of the accident. Shockwave was reopened three days later on August 26, 1999.

Less than two weeks later on September 2, 1999, a 13-year-old boy, concerned that he was not properly fastened into his restraints, intentionally slipped out of them as the train was ascending the lift hill. He jumped onto the adjacent maintenance catwalk and escaped serious injury.

References

Shockwave (Kings Dominion) Wikipedia


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