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What do you call a roller coaster with a drop of 400 feet or more?

A strata coaster is a type of roller coaster with a height or drop of at least 400 feet (120 m).



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A giga roller coaster is a complete circuit roller coaster between 300 feet and 399 feet in height or with a drop within those boundaries. The term Giga coaster was invented by Cedar Fair in order to advertise Millennium Force.

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There are primarily two types of roller coasters: steel and wooden. However, there are 37 different variations or types of roller coasters, including hyper-coasters, inverted roller coasters and spinning roller coasters.

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A coaster may be listed with multiple types. Enter them in the order they appear here: 4th Dimension, Bobsled, Floorless (Semi-floorless), Flying, Inverted, Motorbike (Steeplechase), Pipeline, Side Friction, Sit-Down, Stand-Up, Suspended, Winged, Wooden (Every coaster fits into ONE of these)

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A coaster may be listed with multiple types. Enter them in the order they appear here: 4th Dimension, Bobsled, Floorless (Semi-floorless), Flying, Inverted, Motorbike (Steeplechase), Pipeline, Side Friction, Sit-Down, Stand-Up, Suspended, Winged, Wooden (Every coaster fits into ONE of these)

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Plunge 200 feet on SheiKra - an intense coaster! Climb 200 feet to the edge of a 90-degree drop that inches you mercilessly over the edge—and stops.

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Plunge 200 feet on SheiKra - an intense coaster! Climb 200 feet to the edge of a 90-degree drop that inches you mercilessly over the edge—and stops.

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The Dive Coaster is a steel roller coaster model developed and engineered by Bolliger & Mabillard. The design features one or more near-vertical drops that are approximately 90 degrees, which provide a moment of free-falling for passengers.

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A strata coaster is a type of roller coaster with a height or drop of at least 400 feet (120 m). As with the other two height classifications, the term strata was first introduced by Cedar Point with the release of Top Thrill Dragster, a 420-foot-tall (130 m) roller coaster that opened in 2003.

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A Strata roller coaster (also called a Tera Roller Coaster) is any complete-circuit roller coaster with a height between 400 and 499 feet.

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A hypercoaster is either any continuous-circuit roller coaster with a height or drop measuring greater than 200 feet (61 m) or any complete-circuit roller coaster with a height or drop between 200 and 299 feet (61 and 91 meters).

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The Dive Coaster is a steel roller coaster model developed and engineered by Bolliger & Mabillard. The design features one or more near-vertical drops that are approximately 90 degrees, which provide a moment of free-falling for passengers.

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Timber Drop (Fraispertuis City, France) It remains the steepest roller coaster in Europe. The 4 million euro attraction was the most expensive in the history of Fraispertuis City. More than a quarter of that budget was spent on its theming, with the trains passing through various tree trunks and stumps.

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North America's tallest and world's fastest & steepest hybrid coaster. Iron Gwazi takes thrills to new heights, plunging riders from a 206 foot-tall peak into a 91-degree drop and reaching top speeds of 76 miles per hour.

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Roller coasters are driven almost entirely by basic inertial, gravitational and centripetal forces, all manipulated in the service of a great ride.

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Gravity applies a constant downward force on the cars. The coaster tracks serve to channel this force — they control the way the coaster cars fall. If the tracks slope down, gravity pulls the front of the car toward the ground, so it accelerates.

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