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  COASTER-net.com v8 > Ride Gallery > Apollo's Chariot, Busch Gardens Europe

Busch Gardens Williamsburg has always been known for unleashing world-class, top-quality rides to the world, and 1999 was the year that history repeated itself again. Bolliger and Mabillard were called in from Switzerland to bring to life their second coaster for the Williamsburg park, following 1997's hit inverted coaster Alpengeist. With Alpengeist, the Swiss company had created a ride that focused on inversions, twister elements, and height, but for this thrill ride Busch Gardens wanted something that would serve up dramatic plunges and sheer speed. The 1997 coaster had been Bolliger and Mabillard's tallest and fastest ride up until that point, but the next Williamsburg project would raise the bar once again.

On March 28th, 1999, Apollo's Chariot saw its inaugural flight as the theme park's first mega-coaster, using an out and back layout of 4,882 track feet to deliver a total of nine high-speed drops, the largest being 210 and 144 feet deep. Upon opening, the coaster grabbed the distinction of being Bolliger and Mabillard's first "Speed Coaster," the company's version of the modern-day mega-coaster, opening two months before sister Speed Coaster Raging Bull at Illinois' Six Flags Great America. This means that the coaster utilized for the first time a unique type of raised seating that elevates riders' feet above the train's floor for a feeling of free-flight, and open-sided trains with single lap restraints to secure thirty-six riders at a time.

To accomplish the first 210-foot plunge, Busch Gardens utilized the theme park's terrain as done with the park's previous three major operating coasters, Loch Ness Monster, Big Bad Wolf, and the aforementioned Alpengeist. The inventive use of the natural Williamsburg topography is demonstrated by a 170-foot lift hill setting the course up for a major sixty-five-degree drop towards the park's river below, and two other plunges using the terrain in a significant fashion. One of those drops is a final five-story plunge and climb into the brakes intended to keep riders on the edge of their seats until the very end of the two-minute, fifteen-second experience. Behold:

Boarding in the park's Italy section, guests take their seats in a 4x9 configuration, secured by simple Y-shaped lap restraints, and Apollo begins by heading skyward up the slope of purple track to reach a summit of seventeen stories. High above the lush green forest below, the ride warms up with a dip and Apollo's Chariot starts off with the 210-foot nosedive from the sky at sixty-five degrees towards a river below.

Riders level out above water and the ride pulls out of the ravine at some seventy-three mph to ascend a second hill. The airtime heats up over the crest, and then the course takes a second downward plunge of 131 feet into a covered section of track. The non-stop action continues with a third hill topping off at fourteen stories, then the track takes on a sharp dive towards the river and into the far turnaround section. Spiraling counterclockwise, Apollo's Chariot winds around a double helix containing a 102-foot fan curve, encircling a natural hill as it goes. Passengers speed out of the helix by banking around to the right and then hopping up into a short run of block brakes.

Off of the brakes, Apollo dives forty-eight feet and flies over a hop before diving eighty-seven feet back into the ravine and paralleling the initial descent. The train navigates its way back up and underneath the yellow support columns for the lift hill in a quick S-curve maneuver ending in a thirty-eight foot left-hand dive. After a small sixteen-foot dip, the coaster takes riders down one last forty-nine-foot plunge and back up onto level track, with one final left U-turn back into the station.

Written by Devin Olson

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Type: Steel, Out & Back, Terrain, Mega-Coaster
Seating: Sit-Down, Raised, 4-Abreast, 36-Passenger
Height: 170'
Drop: 210'
Steepness: 65º
Speed: 73mph / 118kph
Acceleration:
Positive G's: 4.1 g's
Drops: 9
Inversions: 0
Curves:
Crossovers:
Tunnels: 1
Length: 4882'
Duration: 2min, 15sec
Area:
Weight:
Cost:
Designer:
Manufacturer:
Color Scheme: Purple / Silver / Yellow
Soft Debut: March 22, 1999
Official Debut: March 27, 1999
Other info: During the grand opening, Fabio was riding Apollo's Chariot for an inaugural ride when the only recorded bird-rider accident ever gave the model injuries to his nose

Current Rating:
- 7.3 out of 10
- Based on 342 votes

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