- August 20th, 2018, 8:44 pm
#102678
I don't know why they are using Celsius. My only guess would be because this coaster is from overseas, and in Germany, they use celsius. Maybe that is a hint or something to it being from a Manufacturer overseas (Mack). Could be something completely different. I don't know.
As for conversion, I don't think Celsius is meant to convert to Fahrenheit.
35 Degrees Celsius = 95 Degrees Fahrenheit.
42 Degrees Celsius = 107.6 Degrees Fahrenheit.
50 Degrees Celsius = 122 Degrees Fahrenheit.
The numbers above seem way too high for this coaster, in my opinion. Giving the room they are working with, they wouldn't necessarily have enough room for a launch that powerful. Just look at TTD. It goes 120 mph, and it's launch track is pretty long. Only 7 coasters in the world go 100 mph or faster, and I don't see this being one of them.
Plus Mack hasn't built a coaster that fast, or even close to it. So even more unlikely.
Last edited by mdsmith98 on August 20th, 2018, 8:47 pm, edited 3 times in total.