Jumbo Jet | |
---|---|
![]() Jumbo Jet, closed, 1975 | |
Six Flags Great Adventure | |
Location | Six Flags Great Adventure |
Coordinates | 40°8′15.71″N 74°26′25.65″W / 40.1376972°N 74.4404583°W |
Status | Removed |
Replaced by | Super Cat Alpen Blitz |
General statistics | |
Type | Steel |
Manufacturer | Anton Schwarzkopf |
Designer | Werner Stengel |
Model | Jet Star 3 / Jumbo Jet |
Lift/launch system | Electric spiral lift |
Height | 56 ft (17 m) |
Inversions | 0 |
Jumbo Jet at RCDB |
Jumbo Jet was a prefabricated steel roller coaster located within the Fun Fair section of Great Adventure in Jackson, New Jersey. Erected in 1975, the attraction was an example of the Jet Star 3 / Jumbo Jet model line designed by Werner Stengel and manufactured by Anton Schwarzkopf. [1]
The ride was the first Jet Star 3 / Jumbo Jet model coaster to be built in the state of New Jersey. [2] Unlike typical chain lifted or launched roller coasters, this model reached the first drop by way of small wheel motors that drove it up the incline of a helix. [3] Electric spiral lift coasters, which became very common in the 1970s, differed from later steel roller coaster designs in track gauge. [4]
Contemporary press accounts quote Great Adventure Vice President of Operations Robert Minick as saying that Jumbo Jet was "the largest ready-made roller coaster that [could] be bought". [5] The coaster was leased from Willy Miller's Continental Park Attractions, along with several other rides in the Fun Fair section. [6]
Assembled in the spring of 1975, the ride stood idle for weeks, never to be operated or opened to the public, before being dismantled one month later. [7]
The ultimate fate of the ride remains unknown. [6] Although Roller Coaster DataBase once proposed that it might be the Jumbo Jet at Morey's Piers, [8] [9] evidence exists that the latter attraction was in fact purchased in Germany. [10] [11] RCDB later listed the Canadian National Exhibition as another possible site at which the ride may have operated. [1]
Jumbo Jet | |
---|---|
![]() Jumbo Jet, closed, 1975 | |
Six Flags Great Adventure | |
Location | Six Flags Great Adventure |
Coordinates | 40°8′15.71″N 74°26′25.65″W / 40.1376972°N 74.4404583°W |
Status | Removed |
Replaced by | Super Cat Alpen Blitz |
General statistics | |
Type | Steel |
Manufacturer | Anton Schwarzkopf |
Designer | Werner Stengel |
Model | Jet Star 3 / Jumbo Jet |
Lift/launch system | Electric spiral lift |
Height | 56 ft (17 m) |
Inversions | 0 |
Jumbo Jet at RCDB |
Jumbo Jet was a prefabricated steel roller coaster located within the Fun Fair section of Great Adventure in Jackson, New Jersey. Erected in 1975, the attraction was an example of the Jet Star 3 / Jumbo Jet model line designed by Werner Stengel and manufactured by Anton Schwarzkopf. [1]
The ride was the first Jet Star 3 / Jumbo Jet model coaster to be built in the state of New Jersey. [2] Unlike typical chain lifted or launched roller coasters, this model reached the first drop by way of small wheel motors that drove it up the incline of a helix. [3] Electric spiral lift coasters, which became very common in the 1970s, differed from later steel roller coaster designs in track gauge. [4]
Contemporary press accounts quote Great Adventure Vice President of Operations Robert Minick as saying that Jumbo Jet was "the largest ready-made roller coaster that [could] be bought". [5] The coaster was leased from Willy Miller's Continental Park Attractions, along with several other rides in the Fun Fair section. [6]
Assembled in the spring of 1975, the ride stood idle for weeks, never to be operated or opened to the public, before being dismantled one month later. [7]
The ultimate fate of the ride remains unknown. [6] Although Roller Coaster DataBase once proposed that it might be the Jumbo Jet at Morey's Piers, [8] [9] evidence exists that the latter attraction was in fact purchased in Germany. [10] [11] RCDB later listed the Canadian National Exhibition as another possible site at which the ride may have operated. [1]