Fahrenheit (roller coaster)
Encyclopedia
Fahrenheit is a steel
Steel roller coaster
A steel roller coaster is a roller coaster that is defined by having a track made of steel. Steel coasters have earned immense popularity in the past 50 years throughout the world...

 roller coaster
Roller coaster
The roller coaster is a popular amusement ride developed for amusement parks and modern theme parks. LaMarcus Adna Thompson patented the first coasters on January 20, 1885...

 at Hersheypark
Hersheypark
Hersheypark is an amusement park located in Hershey, Pennsylvania, near the Hershey Chocolate Factory.Hersheypark was opened on April 24, 1907 as a leisure park for the employees of the Hershey Chocolate Company, an American confectionery company. Later, the company decided to open the park to the...

 in Hershey, Pennsylvania
Hershey, Pennsylvania
Hershey is a census-designated place in Derry Township, Dauphin County in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The community is located 14 miles east of Harrisburg and is part of the Harrisburg–Carlisle Metropolitan Statistical Area. Hershey has no legal status as an incorporated municipality...

, United States
United States
The United States of America is a federal constitutional republic comprising fifty states and a federal district...

. The ride features six inversions and opened on May 24, 2008, replacing the Western Chute-Out water slide complex. The coaster's first drop is at 97 degrees, making it the second steepest in the United States behind Steel Hawg
Steel Hawg
Steel Hawg is a roller coaster at Indiana Beach, Monticello, Indiana. The ride is the first El Loco model built by manufacturer S&S Worldwide of Logan, Utah. The Steel Hawg was expected to open in mid May, but was rescheduled for an early July opening....

 at Indiana Beach
Indiana Beach
Indiana Beach is an amusement park and resort located on Lake Shafer in Monticello, Indiana.-History:The resort was developed and owned by the Spackman family, who sold to Morgan RV Resorts LLC in 2008...

.

In October, when Hersheypark is decorated in a Halloween theme (Hersheypark in the Dark), Fahrenheit is dubbed Fearenheit.

History

Fahrenheit was announced in a Hersheypark press release on September 27, 2007. The ride is the 11th roller coaster and was one of two new attractions for the 2008 season.

Viral marketing campaign

Fahrenheit was the first ever roller coaster to gather hype through a viral marketing
Viral marketing
Viral marketing, viral advertising, or marketing buzz are buzzwords referring to marketing techniques that use pre-existing social networks to produce increases in brand awareness or to achieve other marketing objectives through self-replicating viral processes, analogous to the spread of viruses...

 campaign. The campaign started as a post on coaster website ThrillNetwork.com regarding the sight of businessmen in the general area of where Fahrenheit is going to be built.

At first, the ride was planned for an announcement on October 2, 2007. A sign was seen on the side of the wooden structure for the Western Chute-Out slide the ride would replace. Not long after the teaser was shown, a web design company named "Nantimi" was uncovered. Curiously, the name of the company was an anagram of Intamin, a roller coaster design firm. Nantimi supposedly had just announced that they would be creating a website to promote Hershey's new attraction, and revealing the price of the attraction, $12.1 million. Two days later, it was discovered that the log-in window on the Nantimi site had a username and password written in it. Using it to log in, logos for a ride called "Tsunami" were discovered.

Soon after, it was found that the Nantimi website was registered through web hosting company Go Daddy
Go Daddy
Go Daddy is an Internet domain registrar and Web hosting company that also sells e-business related software and services. In 2010, it reached more than 45 million domain names under management. Go Daddy is currently the largest ICANN-accredited registrar in the world, and is four times the size of...

, and through it, an address to Nantimi's supposed headquarters was found. Putting the address into online map software, it was discovered that this supposed headquarters was in the middle of an open field with no nearby buildings except a farm. In early September, it was discovered by looking through the Nantimi website a link saying "them.travelled/thRu", that led to a page with a letter that claimed that the materials designed by Nantimi would be ready by September 26 "for the following day's announcement". An e-mail address was then discovered. Eventually, another e-mail address was discovered, and when e-mailed, provided a response in binary
Binary code
A binary code is a way of representing text or computer processor instructions by the use of the binary number system's two-binary digits 0 and 1. This is accomplished by assigning a bit string to each particular symbol or instruction...

, providing another e-mail address.

After an e-mail was sent to this address, a reply arrived revealing a new announcement date, September 27, along with saying that those playing the Alternate Reality Game
Alternate reality game
An alternate reality game is an interactive narrative that uses the real world as a platform, often involving multiple media and game elements, to tell a story that may be affected by participants' ideas or actions....

 would receive the announcement on September 26, 2007. Later, by re-arranging the letters of the phrase "them.travelled/thRu" a location on the Nantimi site was discovered at the URL, where an animated GIF flashing between several pictures was discovered. These pictures included pictures of the Western Chute-Out slides, a section of track of the style used by Intamin, and a picture of the ride's layout.

Sometime later, someone e-mailed Hersheypark asking if they had any connection to Nantimi. In the reply, Hershey confirmed the September 27 announcement date. The same day, Nantimi hired a new employee, a web security developer named Donan Michael. The announcement of the hiring included information that on his favorite colors (silver and orange), and that Donan was a specialist in base64 encoding. That day, a new teaser page was posted on the Hersheypark website, confirming the September 27 announcement date once again. Two days later, coaster enthusiast website Coasterdom managed to get an interview with an employee of Nantimi. The interview contained a reference to "nanatomic" a member of another coaster website, Theme Park Review.

The same day the interview was posted, a hint, "s & o are the key" and a puzzle featuring an image of what appeared to be roller coaster track was found. Later that day, yet another e-Mail address was uncovered, and when contacted, replied with more binary, that when translated led to another address. That night, the puzzle was completely solved, revealing a shot of part of the ride. Also that night, sing the information that Donan was a specialist in base64 encoding, and his favorite colors, silver and orange, someone thought to encode the phrase "silver and gold" in base64
Base64
Base64 is a group of similar encoding schemes that represent binary data in an ASCII string format by translating it into a radix-64 representation...

, revealing another URL, which provided a black and white image of the Western Chute-Out slides, that was also the GIF animation that the puzzle was found in.

A few days later, 25 people across several coaster related sites began to get messages about "Phase 10". These e-Mails requested that the people the message had sent to them provide their name, birthday, and e-mail address. The next day, a picture of one of the supposed employees of Nantimi meeting with Sandor Kernacs, president of Intamin was discovered. The next day, the ones who had received the messages began getting e-mails containing small square pictures with the subject "25" and text saying "You are one. Play nice.". It was quickly discovered the squares were pieces of a puzzle, and the puzzle started being assembled soon after. Then, a location on the Nantimi website was discovered that contained a list of threads relating to Hersheypark's 2008 ride on several popular coaster enthusiast forums. Soon after a blog supposedly by Nantimi employee Martin Tinley surfaced.

The next day, a supposed beta video of the new attraction was posted on coaster forum Theme Park Review, however it was revealed after a few days to be a hoax created by a coaster enthusiast who wanted to stop people believing in the game. The same day the video was revealed to be false, a sale listing for the Western Chute-Out slides was discovered on the website of "Rides4U" a company dedicated to selling amusement rides. Although there were little to no hints from Nantimi for several days, after Nantimi resumed sending out the square pieces, the entire right hand side of the puzzle was completed by the morning of September 25. It was also discovered that the left hand side of the picture had been flipped upside down. When flipped the right way, even more of the ride was revealed.

The same day, Nantimi hired another employee, Natalie Vegan. Curiously, her first name and last initial were identical to the member "nanatomic" on the Theme Park Review forums who had previously been referenced in Coasterdom's Nantimi interview. When an e-mail was sent to Natalie's address, a reply was received, strangely from another Nantimi employee, Luke Nanavati, Nantimi's CEO. This e-mail also included the phrase "GottenBaklavaCompulsion..". The puzzle was then completed on the afternoon of that day, September 25. The next day, the "GottenBaklavaCompulsion.." phrase was deciphered, revealing the blog of Luke Nanavati. Later that day, Donan revealed that for those who played the game and received the puzzle pieces, the announcement would arrive at 11:11 PM that night.

That afternoon, a color picture taken in the coaster simulation game NoLimits surfaced. The picture depicted the ride's inverted loop element as well as one of the Corkscrew inversions. At 11:11 PM, as promised, the 25 who received the puzzle pieces received user names and passwords to log in to the Nantimi website and view computer generated footage of the ride. However, someone soon managed to access the video without logging in. The video was deleted soon after this incident. Also, shortly after the 25 received their puzzle pieces, 11 of the 25 players were invited to be the first riders on Fahrenheit during opening day in May. At noon on September 27, along with the announcement of the ride, Fahrenheit, Hersheypark confirmed that they were behind the game. According to a press release put out by the park, the Nantimi website attracted more than 34,000 hits from 47 states and 28 countries.

Naming

Fahrenheit is the unit of temperature most commonly used in the United States. The name works with the high degree drop (97) of the first hill. Fahrenheit 451
Fahrenheit 451
Fahrenheit 451 is a 1953 dystopian novel by Ray Bradbury. The novel presents a future American society where reading is outlawed and firemen start fires to burn books...

, written by Ray Bradbury
Ray Bradbury
Ray Douglas Bradbury is an American fantasy, horror, science fiction, and mystery writer. Best known for his dystopian novel Fahrenheit 451 and for the science fiction stories gathered together as The Martian Chronicles and The Illustrated Man , Bradbury is one of the most celebrated among 20th...

, was stated as an inspiration for the name of the ride by one of the four men who had helped create the ride.

Track layout

Described as a "vertical lift inverted loop coaster", Fahrenheit features a 121 foot vertical lift as well as six inversions, airtime hills and high speed banked curves, cobra roll, including a record breaking 97-degree drop on the first hill. Storm Runner at Hersheypark has a 90 degree drop, the previous steepest at Hersheypark.

Ride Experience

The coaster train exits the station and makes a 135 degree right turn. The train then climbs the vertical lift hill of 121 feet. Cresting the hill riders face down directly at the ground and fall into the 97 degree drop. At the bottom of the drop is an on ride camera. The train then ascends into a rare Norwegian loop. At entrance into the Norwegian loop the train rolls to the left and dives through a half loop down to the ground. The train soars up and rolls out to the left as it exits the Norwegian loop. Upon exit the train dives down and to the left into a two inversion cobra roll, an element that returns riders in the same direction the train enters. Following the cobra roll the train rolls into two consecutive corkscrews and a banked turn to the right through the lift hill. Exiting the turn the train flies over a small airtime hill and through a wide low to the ground left banked turn up into a slanted downward final brake run. The train then makes another 135 degree turn back into the station concluding the 85 second ride on Fahrenheit.

Records

External links

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