Rebel Yell (roller coaster)

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Rebel Yell

The lift hill
Location Kings Dominion
Type Wood - Racing
Status Open
Opened May 3, 1975
Manufacturer Philadelphia Toboggan Company
Designer John C. Allen
Track layout Twin
Height 85 ft (26 m)
Length 3,368 ft (1,027 m)
Max speed 56 mph (90 km/h)
Duration 2:15
Max vertical angle 50°
Capacity 1200 riders per hour
Height restriction 3 ft 8 in (110 cm)
Rebel Yell at RCDB
Pictures of Rebel Yell at RCDB

Rebel Yell is a wooden roller coaster located at Kings Dominion in Doswell, Virginia. It opened with the park in 1975.

Rebel Yell is a racing roller coaster, featuring two individual tracks that parallel each other. From 1993-2007 the Rebel Yell had one side of the tracks traveling forwards and one side traveling backwards.

Its design was inspired by the Racer, another wooden racing coaster at Kings Dominion's sister park, Kings Island, in Cincinnati, Ohio. In turn, Rebel Yell's design was the basis for Thunder Road, at Carowinds in Charlotte, North Carolina.

There is one red and one blue train on each side. When only running one train on each side, an effort is made to run one train of each color.

It is an ACE Coaster Landmark.[1]

[edit] History

  • Rebel Yell originally paralleled Lake Charles, a large man-made lake on the northwest corner of Kings Dominion. Two thirds of the lake was drained in the early 1990s when the space was needed for construction of a water park. (The Anaconda roller coaster still runs over the remainder of the lake.) The roller coaster now divides the water park in half with a walkway running under it.
  • The trains on one side of Rebel Yell were turned to face backwards in the mid-1990s.
  • The ride's name comes from The Rebel Yell, a battlecry used by Confederate soldiers during the American Civil War. At the end of the ride, the trains pass through a tunnel that reverberates with a sound that resembles screaming.
  • Rebel Yell was featured in the 1977 movie, "Rollercoaster".

[edit] References