Stampida

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Park section Far West
Coordinates 41°05′25″N 1°09′24″E / 41.0904°N 1.15658°E / 41.0904; 1.15658
Status Operating
Opening date March 17, 1997 (1997-03-17)
Stampida
Stampida's first drop
PortAventura Park
Park section Far West
Coordinates 41°05′25″N 1°09′24″E / 41.0904°N 1.15658°E / 41.0904; 1.15658
Status Operating
Opening date March 17, 1997 (1997-03-17)
General statistics
Type Wood Racing
Manufacturer Custom Coasters International
Designer John Wardley, Larry Bill
Lift/launch system Chain lift hill
Red Blue
Height 84 ft (25.6 m) 84 ft (25.6 m)
Length 3,127 ft (953.1 m) 3,127 ft (953.1 m)
Speed 46 mph (74.0 km/h) 46 mph (74.0 km/h)
Inversions 0 0
Duration 1:40 1:40
Max vertical angle 52° 52°
Height restriction 120 cm (3 ft 11 in)
Trains 4 trains with 6 cars. Riders are arranged 2 across in 2 rows for a total of 24 riders per train.
Stampida at RCDB
Pictures of Stampida at RCDB

Stampida is a racing wooden roller coaster at PortAventura Park in Salou and Vila-seca, Catalonia, Spain. Designed by John Wardley and Larry Bill, the ride opened in 1997 and was built by Custom Coasters International. The ride is located in the Far West section of the park, and is themed to a duel in wagons to claim land in the American frontier. Standing at a height of 26 metres (84 ft) feet, Stampida features a 52-degree drop, reaching a top speed of 74 kilometres per hour (46 mph). Each track measures 953 metres (3,127 ft) in length and offers approximately one minute and forty seconds of ride time.

Stampida's KumbaK trains cresting one of the ride's hills

Employed by The Tussauds Group who held a 40.01% share of PortAventura Park,[1] theme park designer John Wardley had assisted in design of the park before its opening. As a second-phase expansion, Wardley suggested a racing wooden roller coaster, in part due to its high guest engagement both on and off of the ride. To make the ride more unique, he included in the design of the layout a section in which each track entered a tunnel before splitting apart, then approaching each other head-on to create a near miss effect. Wardley designed the ride in conjunction with Larry Bill from Custom Coasters International (CCI), the roller coaster manufacturer who was hired to create the coaster.[2][3] Wardley had worked with CCI in the past for Oakwood Theme Park's Megafobia wooden coaster.[3] Stampida is one of only two dual-tracked roller coasters built by CCI (the other being the now-defunct Twisted Twins at Kentucky Kingdom).[4] Stampida originally featured two-across, twelve-car trains with two rows per car built by Philadelphia Toboggan Coasters (PTC)[2] which featured an individual mechanical lap bar for each seat, allowing a maximum theoretical capacity of 2,500 riders per hour.[5] In contrast to the 26-metre-tall (84 ft), 953-metre-long (3,127 ft) Stampida,[2] Tomahawk, another wooden roller coaster built by CCI, was placed next to Stampida as smaller, single-tracked coaster aimed at a younger audience.[6][3] Tomahawk's layout runs next to Stampida's tracks, interacting at several points.[3] Both Stampida and Tomahawk officially opened on 17 March 1997.[6][2]

In 2007, the park contracted KumbaK to make modifications to Stampida and Tomahawk. Stampida's original PTC trains were replaced with four trains built by KumbaK, which replicated the previous seating arrangement. Each seat featured an individual lap bar and no seat belt, and each row had a video camera supplied by Ridercam of Germany. KumbaK additionally replaced the ride's control system and added magnetic brakes to the coaster, quoted to improve the ride's capacity by up to fifteen percent.[7]

Ride experience

Incidents

References

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