"trademarks" on you coasters?

I try to use the terrain to my adjantage and have the station at the top of a hill so it can drop and add some excitement to the beginning. Whenever I make a hyper-coaster or out and back woodie, I always try to make a double up and or double down to give the peeps some much needed air. :)

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Mayday - Memorial Day Weekend - Nonpoint, Nickelback, Oleander, Staind
Ozzfest - June 8 - Drowning Pool, Papa Roach, Linkin Park, Disturbed, Black Sabbath
Awake Tour- June 15 - Darwin's Waiting Room, Puddle of Mudd, Deftones, Godsmack

Underground tunnels for me, especially at the end. I love having the tops of bunny hops above ground, and the rest under, like Tremors' 2nd hill. That and terrain use!
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Musician, snowboarder, member of ACE and the ECC
Lately, all my woodies have had a double-up,double-down hill. I just like the way they look. ALL my wooden twisters have a steep-turning first drop like on ROAR. I also try to have both left-turning and right-turning helicies. On my steel loopers, there is almost always a cutback. I rarely make Anton S. loopers anymore, besides a money-making shuttle with a spiral towers like on S:UE. On my non-loopers, like on the wooden twisters, there is at least one steep twisting drop though it is rarely the first drop (usually the 3rd and I use it as a turnaround).

But one thing that all the coasters (save some shuttles) MUST have is both left and right turns. For that reason, I seldom make plain out and back coasters. They are usually twister style or dog-legged.
jeremy

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"When I take action I'm not going to fire a $2 million missile at a $10 empty tent and hit a camel in the butt. It's going to be decisive." GWB

I always have a x style dip at the top of the lift hill, I don't really know why though.

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