
Coming Soon!
#11
Posted 03 April 2004 - 11:33 PM
#12
Posted 06 April 2004 - 09:09 PM
I have been busy on my soon to be released Comet @ Crystal Beach pack. I have been able to get enough layout information to recreate the Wild Mouse @ Crystal Beach, and though a bonus ride for the pack, will be a gem.
#13
Posted 06 April 2004 - 09:13 PM
I cannot find any photos of the Yankee Cannonball's brakerun and station. I have an idea as to their layout, but cannot act further without hard photos of that section of the ride. An aerial shot would be great.I have a Track Pack suggestion. Could you do the Yankee Cannonball at Canobie Lake Park? I would like to see it in RCT2 without WW or TT.
#14
Posted 06 April 2004 - 10:01 PM
Montezum is the first "Woodie" in South America. It is also the first modern era wooden coaster ever designed and built incorporating truly significant design and construction innovations for safety and maintenance; made possible by advances in computer aided design technology, acording to the builder. It was built in 1999 by Roller Coaster Corporation of America, is 3,300 feet long with a height of 146 feet and a drop of 139 and swopes under the park's entrance road. Photos available both at the RCCA site , at the Hopi Hari site, and living here I have a lot myself!
#15
Posted 06 April 2004 - 10:18 PM
I live about 15 minutes from the park and I loved riding the Comet
and the wild mouse!
Thanks for all your track packs

#16
Posted 06 April 2004 - 10:45 PM
The nationality of a coaster project doesn't present any real difficulty so long as I can locate enough photographs to document the track. I've done projects from Belgium, Japan, UK and Finland.Steve, I know working with foreign coasters is much harder, but as a suggestion for a future project I'd like to suggest Montezuem at the Hopi Hart Parque near São Paulo Brazil.
Montezum is the first "Woodie" in South America. It is also the first modern era wooden coaster ever designed and built incorporating truly significant design and construction innovations for safety and maintenance; made possible by advances in computer aided design technology, acording to the builder. It was built in 1999 by Roller Coaster Corporation of America, is 3,300 feet long with a height of 146 feet and a drop of 139 and swopes under the park's entrance road. Photos available both at the RCCA site , at the Hopi Hari site, and living here I have a lot myself!
I will jot it down.
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