Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Thunder Run (Kentucky Kingdom)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Status
  
Operating

Type
  
Model
  
Custom

Opened
  
1990

Height restriction
  
1.22 m

Opening date
  
August 1990 (1990-08)

Manufacturer
  
Height
  
27 m

Max speed
  
85 km/h

Track length
  
869 m

Thunder Run (Kentucky Kingdom) Thunder Run Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom

Designer
  
Curtis D. Summers, John Fetterman

Similar
  
Storm Chaser, Lightning Run, T3, Shuttle Loop, Gotham City Gauntlet

Thunder Run is a wooden roller coaster at the Kentucky Kingdom amusement park in Louisville, Kentucky. The ride originally operated from August 1990 through to October 2009, when then-operators Six Flags abandoned the park. After remaining standing but not operating since 2009, Thunder Run reopened in May 2014 when Kentucky Kingdom reopened under new operators.

Contents

Thunder Run (Kentucky Kingdom) G Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom Page Four

The ride was manufactured by Dinn Corporation and designed by Curtis D. Summers and John Fetterman. With 2,850 feet (870 m) of track, Thunder Run stands 90 feet (27 m) tall and features a top speed of 53 miles per hour (85 km/h).

Thunder Run (Kentucky Kingdom) Thunder Run Roller Coaster Photos Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom

History

Thunder Run (Kentucky Kingdom) Thunder Run Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom Best Amusment Rides

Kentucky Kingdom opened on May 23, 1987, leasing 10 acres (4.0 ha) at the Kentucky Exposition Center property. The Texas investors who operated the park filed it for bankruptcy after only one season of operation. The Ed Hart-led Themeparks LLC firm purchased the rights to operate the park in 1989, reopening the park the following year. As part of the reopening the new operators added a collection of new rides including Thunder Run, which opened in August 1990. Early in Thunder Run's operating life, its train had derailed from the lift hill and the ride's lap bars were found to be unsafe. No injuries were reported from either incident. The original ride was retracked by Martin & Vleminckx prior to its closure in 2009.

Thunder Run (Kentucky Kingdom) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Thunder Run operated until the end of the 2009 season on November 1. Amid a corporate bankruptcy, on February 4, 2010, Six Flags announced the park would cease operations immediately due to the rejection of an amended lease by the Kentucky State Fair Board. Many attempts were made to reopen the park under new operators. Eventually, on June 27, 2013, a group of investors led by Ed Hart negotiated an agreement to reopen the park. The group would spend $36 million to reopen the park in May 2014. Thunder Run would be part of the opening day lineup of attractions. Rocky Mountain Construction was hired to refurbish the ride, resulting in the existing wooden track to be replaced. On October 10, 2013, Kentucky Kingdom invited members of the media and amusement industry to ride the refurbished Thunder Run. The ride reopened to the public on May 24, 2014. After the 2016 season, Kentucky Kingdom announced that Thunder Run would get new trains from the Philadelphia Toboggan Company for the 2017 season. These trains would replace the ones first put into service in 1990.

Characteristics

Thunder Run (Kentucky Kingdom) FileThunder Run at Six Flags Kentucky Kingdom 5jpg Wikimedia Commons

The 2,850-foot-long (870 m) Thunder Run stands 90 feet (27 m) tall. With a top speed of 53 miles per hour (85 km/h), the ride featured a ride duration of approximately 2 minutes. The ride would operate with a single train featuring six cars. Each would seat riders in two rows of two, totalling 24 riders per train. Thunder Run features 70 degree banked turns.

Thunder Run's design was originally intended for Americana Amusement Park in the late 1980s; Dinn Corporation was contracted to manufacturer a wooden roller coaster designed by Curtis D. Summers and John Fetterman, before the plans fell through. The design was later used as the foundation for International Coasters' only two roller coasters which are located at Carowinds and Kings Dominion, both named the Hurler.

Ride experience

Thunder Run features a double out and back layout. It begins with a left turn out of the station. This leads to the 90-foot-tall (27 m) chain lift hill. Once at the top, riders go down a small dip and along a 180 degree turn to the left. The first drop of 74 feet (23 m) leads into a near-ground level 70-degree banked turn to the left. A series of small camelback hills are followed by a turnaround. The train proceeds back towards the station with another hill. This process repeats a second time leading back into the brake run and station.

Reception

In 1993 and 1994, Thunder Run was cited by Amusement Business as the "Most Terrifying Roller Coaster" on a top 10 list. The American Coaster Enthusiasts' Inside Track magazine ranked Thunder Run as the "fourth best of its kind in the nation". In 2007, the Lexington Herald-Leader described the ride as having "a few nice drops and that jerky, clicking wooden coaster feel that some people love, but it never gets too wild". Tim O'Brien, formerly of Amusement Business, rode the inaugural run of the ride in 1990, as well as the first cycle of the refurbished ride in 2013. O'Brien describes the updated ride as "a better ride today than it was back then", commending the ride's ability to give a classic wooden roller coaster feel, yet run smoothly. He states Thunder Run "is one of the top wooden roller coasters in the world".

In Amusement Today's annual Golden Ticket Awards, Thunder Run has appeared four times from 2001 through to 2004. It debuted at position 34 in 2001 before dropping to 49 in 2004.

Mitch Hawker's worldwide Best Roller Coaster Poll is an annual survey of roller coasters from around the world. It is widely regarded as the best and most accurate of any roller coaster poll available due to its ranking algorithm which prevents the poll from becoming a popularity contest. In the poll, Thunder Run entered at position 30 in 1994, maintaining an average of 54 for the 17 years that followed. The ride's ranking in subsequent polls is shown in the table below.

References

Thunder Run (Kentucky Kingdom) Wikipedia