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Not What You Meant?  There are 35 definitions for Tornado.

Tornado (roller coaster)

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Tornado
Location Adventureland (Iowa)
Park section County Fair
Type Wood
Status Open
Opened July 4, 1978
Manufacturer Philadelphia Toboggan Company
Designer William Cobb
Track layout Out and Back
Lift/launch system Chain-lift
Height 93 feet (28.3 m)
Length 2,850 feet (869 m)
Max speed 58 miles per hour (93 km/h)
Inversions none
Duration 2 minutes
Tornado at RCDB
Pictures of Tornado at RCDB
Portal:Amusement parks Amusement Parks Portal

The Tornado is a wooden roller coaster located at Adventureland in Altoona, Iowa, near Des Moines. The Tornado made its debut on July 4, 1978, during Adventureland's third full season. It was designed by William Cobb, the legendary wooden coaster designer/engineer, and soon after its opening was considered one of the top ten wooden roller coasters in the world. Even today after more than a quarter-century and the addition of many other rides and three other coasters, this is still Adventureland's signature ride. The name Tornado has special significance for the park. Adventureland was to open for its debut season in July 1974. However, a real tornado hit the park before it could open, and caused it to be delayed until August of that year. When the ride debuted in 1978, park advertisements exclaimed "Another Tornado has hit Adventureland!"

Layout

The layout of the Tornado is a basic out and back. After leaving the station, the train coasts down a small incline, around a curve, and heads up the lift hill to the top of the first drop. This drop, which is the largest in the ride, can provide for some air time depending on where riders are seated on the train. The second drop is considerably shorter, but leads into the third drop, which contains a "head-chopper" moment at the bottom as the track ducks under some support structures for the return track, which is immediately to the rider's left at this point in the ride. After drop three, the train rounds a banked turn and heads back to the station via three additional smaller drops. Previously, during busy periods, two trains could be run at the same time. During two-train operation, the goal (for optimum rider throughput) is to have the second train ready to 'release' when the first train hits the midpoint of the track, which is the banked turn where the first train switches from "out" to "back". In case something goes wrong with loading, there is an extended covered area beyond the station with skid-brakes where the first train can stop and wait for the second train, if necessary. If this occurs, the second train will enter the station once the other train has started up the lift hill. However, due to safety restraints added to the ride, two-train operation is no longer possible due to the extra time required to harness the riders. The two cars are swapped mid-season.

Accidents

On July 22, 2006, a loose board left on or near the track of the Tornado by a maintenance worker was responsible for injuring Mackenzie Jennings, an 11-year-old girl. The board hit the girl in the head and knocked her unconscious. She underwent surgery at Mercy Medical Center in Des Moines to remove a blood clot and reduce swelling in her head. State inspectors who later inspected the ride themselves discovered the board had not come from the Tornado itself and allowed the ride to re-open. Two others were also injured in this incident. [1]

References

  1. ^ Des Moines Register (2006). Girl hurt on ride now recovering. Retrieved on 2006-07-29.

Coordinates: 41°39′5.25″N, 93°30′9.07″W

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Tornado (roller coaster) from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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