The ride was manufactured by Bolliger & Mabillard, the same Swiss firm that built the Nemesis inverted roller coaster at Alton Towers.
The ride stands 29 metres (95 ft) tall, features a top speed of 50 miles per hour (80 km/h), and four inversions.
[1] The layout was initially draughted by John Wardley, prior to his leaving the Tussauds Group, and the coaster was designed by Werner Stengel for B&M.
In May 2004, 81 students took part in the record, which was set at 28 – the number of seats on a single Nemesis Inferno train.
With a top speed of 80 kilometres per hour (50 mph), the ride features four inversions including a vertical loop, a zero-g roll, and a set of interlocking corkscrews.
[4] After leaving the station, the train takes a right-hand swing drop into a tunnel, where it is shot with simulated fire.
[3][10][11] In Mitch Hawker's worldwide Best Roller Coaster Poll, Nemesis Inferno entered at position 70 in 2003, before peaking at 51 in 2006.