Frequently Asked Questions about ACE
- What is ACE?
- Founded in 1978, American Coaster Enthusiasts (ACE) is a non-profit organization of more than
5,000 members from 16 countries.
- What does ACE do?
- ACE is the world’s largest ride enthusiast organization, and its members are the most educated, dedicated,
and passionate amusement park guests. ACE’s activities are extensive and include award-winning publications,
action-packed events, and exhaustive preservation efforts. ACE is highly visible in the mainstream media.
Local television stations and newspapers often consider ACE events in their area to be major news items.
ACE officials are frequently on hand for the debut of major new roller coasters at amusement and theme parks.
In addition, numerous shows made for cable networks such as The Discovery Channel have prominently featured ACE.
Ultimately, ACE’s mission is to promote and enjoy roller coasters everywhere, regardless of type or size.
- What happens at ACE events?
- ACE events, lasting from one to three days, are scheduled at amusement and theme parks throughout North America,
and smaller more remote destinations are not overlooked. Often two or more parks in an area are visited during a single
event. ACE also organizes extended tours at parks on other continents, including Europe and Asia. Undoubtedly, the most
anticipated activity at an ACE event is ERT (Exclusive Ride Time), a concept pioneered by ACE wherein host parks set aside
a few hours, before they open and/or after they close, so that attendees may enjoy the rides without crowds.
- ACE’s annual convention, known as “Coaster Con,” is the organization’s flagship event and is held the third week of
each June. Typically lasting six days, Coaster Con is far more than just riding roller coasters. Known to be an
exercise in sleep deprivation, presentations, workshops, photo and video contests are just some of the activities
one finds at a Coaster Con. A gala banquet, where luminaries from the amusement industry appear as featured keynote
speakers, is one of the event’s highlights.
- As many members quickly discover, ACE is not just about coasters—it is just as much about the people who ride them.
Lifelong friendships are born at ACE events, and some ACEers have even found true love, married, and started new
generations of coaster enthusiasts.
- What exactly does ACE publish?
- ACE News is the organization’s bi-monthly newsletter. Each 20-page issue is filled with articles offering
detailed descriptions of new rides, accounts of ACE events, and other organization news, accompanied by dozens of
photos. RollerCoaster! is ACE’s quarterly full-color magazine that features an extensive array of articles
ranging in type from historical to technical to international, along with breathtaking photos.
Both of these publications are included with most memberships.
- Guide to Ride is a guidebook series that is periodically updated.
With detailed information, statistics, and stunning photographs of every operating roller coaster in North America,
a current edition of this ACE publication is a must-have for every roller coaster enthusiast. ACE also is responsible
for an on-going series of books that chronicle notable roller coaster designers.
- ACE is preserving roller coasters? Do roller coasters really need to be preserved?
- While steel roller coasters seem to proliferate and a few new wooden roller coasters are built each year, the classic
wooden roller coaster is still somewhat of an endangered species. While about 2,000 such rides existed in the US in
the early 1920s, fewer than 125 exist today. Through the decades, hundreds of coasters were lost as parks closed due
to numerous events ranging from the Great Depression in the 1920s to television becoming a new form of entertainment
in the 1950s to rising commercial land value in the 1970s.
- ACE believes that wooden roller coasters are an integral part of the fabric that is Americana.
The organization represents the talents of the most ardent park enthusiasts, amassing a collective historical perspective
unmatched by any other group, anywhere. It is ACE’s goal to save or relocate endangered coasters through education,
awareness, and promotion.
- ACE’s preservation efforts have been instrumental in rescuing classic wooden roller coasters, joining efforts to
refurbish the 1925 Giant Dipper in San Diego and Leap-the-Dips, the world’s oldest roller coaster,
located at Lakemont Park, in Altoona, Pennsylvania. This 1902 "coaster classic" is the last known example of a side-friction
figure-eight roller coaster in the United States.
- Another one of ACE’s projects, closely associated with preservation, is its ambition to develop, build, and operate a
comprehensive roller coaster museum. In pursuit of this goal, ACE established a separate organization, the
Roller Coaster Museum & Archives
(NRCMA). ACE’s own archival collection, consisting of thousands of items, including unique roller coaster cars, will
eventually have an appropriate place to be displayed.
- How did ACE come to be?
- When the motion picture "Rollercoaster" was released in 1977, Kings Dominion, an amusement park north of Richmond, Virginia
and were part of the movie was filmed, staged a coaster-riding marathon as a publicity stunt. Three participants in the
marathon discovered a shared, life-long passion for roller coasters, and the seed for what would become American
Coaster Enthusiasts took hold. ACE officially became an organization when its first convention was held in 1978
at Busch Gardens in Williamsburg, Virginia.
- What roller coaster does ACE rank as the best?
- As an organization, ACE does not rank roller coasters. Such a ranking does not make sense for ACE as a group. One
of ACE’s goals is to promote and protect the classic wooden coaster form—often embodied by older rides at smaller,
less visible amusement parks. Classic roller coasters such as Leap-the-Dips might never qualify as a top ten
thriller, but as the oldest existing roller coaster in the world, there is no other ride that better signifies what
ACE is all about.
- Aw, c’mon, you must have a favorite!
- Among ACEers, you will find as much discussion on this point as you can stand, but you will not find much consensus.
This is part of what makes ACE so much fun. With so many members, each with personal opinions of what makes a good
roller coaster, you are likely to find hundreds of different answers to such a question. Besides, given the
technological advancements in the amusement industry, there are simply too many different types of roller coasters
to make sweeping comparisons. Instead, it is more useful to think of the different genre and sub-genre of
coasters—wooden, steel, looping, inverted, out-and-back, mine-train, etc. ACE appreciates all of them!
- Okay, then what is the scariest coaster?
- People who do not ride roller coasters as often as ACE members do frequently think of them as terrifying things.
Why would anybody desire to be frightened over and over again? Well, you see, we are not scared. Oh sure, at
first, everybody buys into the fear factor built into any good roller coaster; but with experience and exposure,
there’s no reason to be afraid anymore, and once fear is gone, what’s left is sheer exhilaration. We experience
these sensations as extremely pleasurable—and we are not afraid to admit it!
- How does one join ACE or find out more about it?
- Visit the Join ACE page for more information and costs for our various
membership options. You can online or print a membership application and mail it in.
- Explore the rest of our site for more information on membership benefits, a calendar of upcoming events, late-breaking
roller coaster and club news, and our roller coaster census that tracks all of the known coasters in the world.
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