The front was better but only marginally so. I rode Colossus twice, once in the back and once near the front to see whether the position on the train would make any difference. If the entire ride were as good as the heartline rolls this would be a real winner. When is the last time you rode a coaster with as many heartline rolls one right after another? For me this was a first and only. Designing this ride with four heartline rolls in rapid succession was nothing short of brilliant. Photo by Bobbie Butterfield Photo by Bobbie Butterfield Final Thoughts and RatingĬolossus features some nice elements, a superabundance of them, and it’s just unfortunate that the ones at the beginning of the ride are so jarring. The train then veers left and riders pass through a fifth, counterclockwise heartline roll – why not throw that in for good measure? – before returning to the station. These were an absolute delight, not to mention a thrill, and not in the least bit rough. After the corkscrews the train makes a turnaround and negotiates four – count ‘em! – consecutive clockwise heartline rolls. The latter part of the ride is another story altogether. I have no idea how this coaster rode 16 years ago but as of 2018 it was too rough to be enjoyable, at least during the initial part of the ride. Through the first several inversions the ride is a real headbanger. This is followed by another descent into a tunnel and the two corkscrews. It then dives into a tunnel, negotiating an airtime hill, before ascending into a pretty forceful cobra roll. Upon reaching the top the train banks left and descends 97 feet before going up into a vertical loop built over water, a nice touch. Photo by Bobbie Butterfield Ride ExperienceĪ ride on Colossus begins with an ascent up a 98-foot chain lift hill. Colossus reaches a maximum speed of 45 mph and the restraint is an over the shoulder harness. The trains consist of 7 cars seating 2 across in 2 rows for a total capacity of 28 riders. This coaster features the following 10 inversions, in this order: vertical loop, cobra roll, double corkscrew, quadruple heartline roll and single heartline roll. It’s supposedly themed after the ruins of an ancient civilisation although the theme was not at all evident to me, not even from the signage at the entrance. (Colossus was subsequently cloned as 10 Inversion Roller Coaster – how original – in China.) Photo by Bobbie Butterfield Layout, Theming and ElementsĬolossus has a fairly compact layout with 2,788 feet of track. Opened in 2002, it held the record for most inversions on a roller coaster until 2013, when The Smiler (with 14 inversions) opened at Alton Towers. Colossus at Thorpe Park in Surrey, UK is a steel 10-inversion coaster manufactured by Intamin.
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