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Talon (roller coaster)

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Status
  
Operating

Cost
  
$13,000,000 USD

Manufacturer
  
Bolliger & Mabillard

Height
  
41 m

Opened
  
5 May 2001

Opening date
  
May 5, 2001

Type
  
Steel – Inverted

Designer
  
Werner Stengel

Max speed
  
93 km/h

Talon (roller coaster)

Address
  
3830 Dorney Park Rd, Allentown, PA 18104, USA

Park
  
Dorney Park & Wildwater Kingdom

Similar
  
Steel Force, Thunderhawk, Hydra the Revenge, Possessed, Dominator

Talon is a 135-foot (41 m) steel inverted roller coaster at Dorney Park & Wildwater Kingdom in South Whitehall Township, Pennsylvania, United States. It features 4 inversions and close to the ground encounters. Designed by Bolliger & Mabillard, Talon was known to be one of the longest inverted roller coasters in the Northeast when it opened in 2001.

Contents

History

On April 28, 2000, Dorney Park announced that a 135-foot-tall (41 m) four inversion inverted roller coaster would be built for the 2001 season. No further details were given until August 30, 2000 when Dorney Park announced the full details of the new $13 million roller coaster and its name, Talon. The ride would be the Northeast's longest inverted roller coaster and would be built on a portion of land set aside for a major attraction by Cedar Fair when they purchased the park in 1992. Construction began on September 5, 2000 and continued through the winter. The first parts of Talon to be put into place were the brake run and transfer track in October 2000. The roller coaster was topped off (the highest piece of the lift hill) on November 21, 2000 and the track was completed in early 2001. After testing was complete, Talon opened on May 5, 2001.

Experience

Having dispatched from the station, the train immediately begins to climb the 135-foot (41 m) lift hill. Once at the top, the train goes through a pre-drop before making a sharp 120-foot (37 m) downward right turn. The train then enters a 98-foot (30 m) tall vertical loop. After exiting the loop, the train goes through a zero-gravity roll before dropping back to the ground and entering an immelmann loop. The train then makes a full 360-degree upward right turn followed by a left turn leading into another drop. After the drop, the train makes highly banked right turn into a flat spin. Next, the train makes a left turn (extremely close to the ground) before heading to an airtime, and back up which leads into the brake run. After exiting the brake run, the train makes a right turn into a second, shorter, set of brakes before entering the station.

One cycle of the ride lasts about 2 minutes.

Trains

Talon operates with two steel and fiberglass trains. Each train has eight cars that can seat four riders in a single row for a total of 32 riders per train. The train structure is coloured blue and turquoise, the seats are black, and the over-the-shoulder restraints are yellow.

Track

The steel track of Talon is approximately 3,110 feet (950 m) long, the height of the lift is approximately 135 feet (41 m) high, and the entire track weighs just under 3,000,000 pounds (1,400,000 kg). It was manufactured by Clermont Steel Fabricators located in Batavia, Ohio. Unlike other B&M coasters, the track is filled with sand to reduce the noise produced by the trains. Also, the track is painted orange and yellow while the supports are blue.

Slogan & theme

The entrance sign has a mini-slogan as, "The Grip Of Fear", after a claw. The word, "Talon", is another meaning for, "Claw", specifically on Bald eagles and mythical creatures.

References

Talon (roller coaster) Wikipedia