Blog, Reviews

Eurofighter showdown – Saw: The Ride, Speed: No Limits & Rage

Similarly to my blog comparing The Smiler to Stealth, I’d like to breakdown 3 very similar yet ultimately different rides. 3 Gerstlauer Eurofighters here in the UK, Speed: No Limits, Saw: The Ride and Rage.

The facts

All 3 rollercoasters feature similar elements, all have beyond vertical drops, all have vertical chain driven lifts, over shoulder restraints, 8 riders per car and all feature at least 2 inversions.

The fastest and tallest is Speed: No Limits, followed by Saw: The Ride and finally Rage is the shortest and slowest. Saw has the longest track, Rage the shortest and Speed features only 2 inversions, while the other two have 3.

Bottom of Saw’s beyond vertical drop with Samurai behind

Saw is the only one to feature any real theming. Rage does try to have a little storyline with a superhero called Captain Rageman attached to the ride, but beside a voiceover and a few static boards, that’s really it. Speed has no theme.

Speed was the first to be built, arriving in 2006, then Rage in 2007 and finally Saw in 2009. As mentioned earlier, all feature beyond vertical drops, with Rage and Speed having 97 degree drops and Saw’s being 100 degrees.

Speed navigating its heartline roll.

All have held a record for the steepest drops in some form or another, where Speed and Rage were the steepest in the world being tied with 7 others for the title. Saw never held the world record as Steel Hawg ( at Indiana Beach, Indiana) was introduced a year earlier than Saw, and beat its 100 degree drop by 1 degree. However Saw did hold the UK title for 16 weeks before Mumbo Jumbo (at Flamingo Land) took it away again. I’ll certainly have to talk about Mumbo one day!

The theming of Saw

As I mentioned before, only Saw has any theming worth talking about, and it is very heavily themed around the Saw films. It features an extensively themed ride station and building as well as a decently themed queue and of course, a soundtrack.

Saw’s well themed station

Though Speed doesn’t have a theme, I don’t feel it would benefit from one. The same for Rage. Both are fine enough rides without theming, though they could certainly do with a soundtrack to listen to!

Ride experience

All 3 ride well enough, but I feel that the weakest is Saw a that does suffer a fair bit with rough patches, where Speed feels incredibly smooth. Rage is certainly in the middle ground here, not as smooth as Speed, but certainly not as rough as Saw!

I find the trains on all 3 to be quite comfortable, the restraints are just right, and keep you in place enough to enjoy the ride. It’s certainly a different experience being on your back when ascending each rides lift hills but I didn’t feel uncomfortable in my seat on any of the rides.

All 3 would definitely benefit from lap bar restraints as opposed to the over shoulder ones we have, especially Saw, that would add even more to the ride!

Inversions aren’t everything…

Saw and Rage both feature 3 inversions, and Speed only has 2. Each has a different layout, and though each has similar inversions, all are unique in their own right.

Saw has a heartline roll, immelmann loop and a dive loop, Rage has a loop, cutback and heartline roll, and finally Speed has just a loop and heartline roll.

Interestingly, Speed is the only one of the 3 that doesn’t immediately enter into an inversion following the beyond vertical drop, instead opting for an airtime hill, that is taken at decent speed and offers great ejector airtime!

So which is best?

In my opinion, Speed is the better ride out of the 3 but Saw is the best overall experience. The scenery, story elements and ride itself, push Saw slightly ahead of Speed if you take the whole package into consideration.

Rage is the weaker of the 3 for me. It’s still a great ride and well worth a visit to Adventure Island to have a ride on, but I would honestly say that Saw and Speed are better overall.

That is actually me in the back row there!

Blog, Reviews

Battle of the two top tier thrill machines – The Smiler and Stealth

I’d really like to get to the bottom of which is the best, in my opinion, out these two excellent roller coasters. I’d like to break them down into component parts and decide overall which one will finally take the top spot for me, as it’s so close between them!

Theme

Let’s get the big one out of the way, theming. Both roller coasters have a good theme, The Smiler being more industrial and about a machine that brings back your smile. Stealth on the other hand is themed to Speedway racing of the 1950’s in line with the Amity themed area it resides.

Out of the two, I think that The Smiler has better theming, its station building, indoor queue line and exit, and its Marmaliser structure all add to the experience, as well as the score by ImaScore. No one ever talks about the musical scores for rides, which is a shame! It fits in brilliantly with the overall theme of X-Sector and compliments Oblivion well.

Stealth does have a nice theme too, the trains are made to look like 1950’s Chevrolet Bel Air drag racers, and the station does resemble a drag strip starting line with starting lights and audio, but no score that I’ve ever noticed and the queue line is quite plain. The Smilers cattle pen doesn’t fair much better but you have the whole ride going on above you, so once again The Smiler takes marks here!

Ride Experience

Both rides are extremely smooth, The Smiler, for me at least, only has one iffy transition on the cobra roll, whereas Stealth doesn’t really have any points where it’s rough where it shouldn’t be. Obviously the launch on Stealth is quite fierce but it doesn’t bang you about much, if at all. The turn into the top hat, the top hat itself and dive turn back are all very smooth and enjoyable. The top hat is exhilarating, which makes me want to try Top Thrill Dragster and Kingda Ka even more!

The Smiler rides well for almost all of its layout. Inversion after inversion it rides quite smoothly and it’s a joy to ride, much like Stealth. As I mentioned earlier though, the transition from half loop into half corkscrew at the start of the cobraroll can be a bit jarring, but other than that, I’ve never noticed anything particularly unpleasant!

It’s certainly worth mentioning the two airtime hills here as both are taken at speed giving you decent ejector airtime, but the second one after the camera is a particular highlight, especially at night! You get the flash form the camera, then the airtime and drop into the bottom of another inversion is excellent!

This hill right here!

I think I’d have to give Stealth the ride experience points over The Smiler, but only just!

Pure Thrills

For me, the more thrilling of the two is Stealth. Its launch is otherworldly, blowing Icons and Ritas out of the water, and even though it is literally a launch, top hat and airtime hill, it does it well.

The Smiler is also thrilling of course, and at times is intense, but I feel Stealth take it purely from its launch alone!

Offride experience

What are both coasters like to just watch? Admire while you eat your dinner or have rest up having ridden one of them?

The Smiler is a pure joy to watch, especially if both running trains manage to get dualling and take the batwing and cobraroll together. A little tip, if both trains are dropping off their lifthills at a similar sort of time, then you’ll more than likely see both trains take the batwing and cobraroll together!

As for Stealth? It’s certainly fun to watch, and looking up at that 205ft top hat from the ground is a great feeling, with riders screaming on the way down, and the noise of the launch is also fantastic too.

For me though, The Smiler is just more fun to watch, even if I end up not riding as the queue is too long, I can still marvel at it as I walk through X-Sector.

So which should take the top spot?

Though its close as I really, really like both, I’d have to say The Smiler will edge out Stealth for that top spot on my list! Its better theming, musical score and with how much fun it is to just observe doing its thing make up for its slightly rougher ride and thrills, when compared to Stealth anyway!

That’s not to say that Stealth isn’t any good either! Its decent theming, launch and train design, aasd well as it presence in Thorpe Parks skyline make it a more than worthy second place addition to my list!

A shot of The Smiler from my drone, taken during Mardis Gras!