“I’m actually kind of curious to see how this compares to The Beast,” said Bob Fraser from East Dundee. “I grew up in southeastern Ohio, so Kings Island was the nearest theme park.”
[caption id="attachment_2351" align="alignright" width="423" caption="The wooden structure of Goliath, Six Flags Great America's new roller coaster, starts to take shape on Monday, Dec. 9, on the one-time site of Iron Wolf. | Dan Moran/Sun-Times Media "][/caption]“No comparison,” David Stepanek from Oak Lawn told Fraser. “I’ve ridden Outlaw Run and everything RMC touches turns to gold. (It’s) going to be unlike any wooden coaster out there. I guarantee it’s going to be one of the top ones.”
Stepanek referred to Rocky Mountain Construction’s Outlaw Run, which opened in March at Silver Dollar City in Branson, Mo. That wooden coaster debuted with a top speed of 68 mph and a first-drop angle of 81 degrees, numbers that RMC’s Goliath is designed to top.
Whether or not Goliath’s 72 mph and 85-degree first drop down a 180-foot slope will eclipse any other experience will be revealed six months from now. On Monday, the former site of Iron Wolf on the east side of the park was a collection of timber and concrete pads, with the framework of two ride structures starting to take shape.
Asked to put a number on how far along the project is after breaking ground in September, Great America spokeswoman Katy Enrique said the official estimate is around 10 percent.
“All the (concrete) footers are in, and there about 100 of those throughout all of the course,” Enrique said. “The vertical construction started right around Thanksgiving week, and all the track is coming in — it’s sitting out in our parking lot, so as it comes in, they’ll start putting that up.”
[caption id="attachment_2352" align="alignleft" width="238" caption="The wooden beams of Goliath, Six Flags Great America's new roller coaster, are starting to be assembled on the site of the former Iron Wolf, an area between a Scenic Railway station on the south and a picnic grove on the north. | Dan Moran/Sun-Times Media"][/caption]Goliath’s lift hill will reach 165 feet and plunge into a 15-foot-deep trench that has already been carved into the ground and framed with steel. Crews have also installed the concrete foundation for the ride’s mechanical center.
When Great America officials secured approval of a height variance for the coaster just after Labor Day, hope was expressed that the ride might open in time for the park’s 2014 opening weekend, which is on the calendar for May 3-4.
Enrique said Monday that it now looks like Goliath will be open for the holiday weekend of May 24-26, with an invitation-only unveiling on May 22.
Schaffer, who was with a group that won a drawing for the construction tour, said his experience on Outlaw Run — which, like Goliath, also features inversions — has him counting the weeks.
“It’s one of those rides where it’s like, if all your life you’ve been racing a Mustang on a race track and somebody gives you a Ferrari one day, that’s Outlaw Run,” Schaffer said. “It’s unbelieveable.”
[caption id="attachment_2353" align="aligncenter" width="423" caption="A 15-foot-deep trench has been carved out of the ground to accommodate the first drop designed for Six Flags Great America's new wooden roller coaster, Goliath. Trains will plunge into the trench from a lift hill that tops out at 165 feet. | Dan Moran/Sun-Times Media "][/caption]
[caption id="attachment_2354" align="aligncenter" width="423" caption="Crews work on the concrete foundation that will hold the mechanical heart of Goliath, Six Flags Great America's wooden coaster that is set to debut on Memorial Day weekend. | Dan Moran/Sun-Times Media "][/caption]
Article was written by Dan Moran of Sun-Times Media. It appeared in the Lake County News Sun on Tuesday, December 10. Continue here to read the article in the Lake County News Sun.
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