Two roller coasters at Seabreeze Amusement Park were recognized by the American Coaster Enthusiasts for their place in ...
With nothing but paper, tape, and a marble as a test vehicle, engineering students at Tyler ISD’s Career and Technology Center put their designs to the test, building roller coasters filled with loops ...
Liam Thompson builds a full roller coaster in his own backyard in one of his most ambitious engineering projects.
Students in an eighth-grade engineering class at Pleasantville Middle School constructed roller coasters using marbles, paper, popsicle sticks, tape and their critical-thinking skills. The young ...
Loading external pages may require significantly more data usage than loading CBC Lite story pages. A 19-year-old engineering student has built a working roller-coaster in the backyard of his parents' ...
Thomas Mulligan investigates the dark physics and lethal structural design of a thrill ride conceptualized specifically for ...
A group of teenagers huddled around a table in the Augusta County Library on Thursday night, folding pieces of colorful paper. Laughing and talking, the students made chutes, funnels and twists to ...
A countdown began: “Five. Four. Three. Two. One.” Luiza Brunelli Bührer waited in the front car of the roller coaster, and checked her watch to see how fast her heart was beating: 86 beats per minute.
Honestly, nothing quite says "I trust modern engineering" like strapping yourself into a high-tech roller coaster and letting physics do its thing. Roller coasters have evolved far past wooden jolts ...