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Road Runner Express (Six Flags Fiesta Texas)

Amusement ride stubsLooney Tunes stubsMine Train roller coastersOperating roller coastersRoller coasters in Texas
Roller coasters introduced in 1997Roller coasters manufactured by Arrow DynamicsRoller coasters operated by Six FlagsSix Flags Fiesta TexasSix Flags stubsSteel roller coastersWile E. Coyote and the Road Runner
Road Runner Express (Six Flags Fiesta Texas) 2
Road Runner Express (Six Flags Fiesta Texas) 2

Road Runner Express is a steel roller coaster located at Six Flags Fiesta Texas in San Antonio, Texas. It was built for the park's 1997 season and is the last mine train roller coaster ever to be built by Arrow Dynamics in a Six Flags theme park.In contrast to most of the similarly named Road Runner Express coasters at Six Flags parks, Fiesta Texas' version is not a junior coaster, but a full-scale, though not extreme, family roller coaster. The target audience for the ride is families. Some track portions of Road Runner Express pass under segments of the Iron Rattler roller coaster, as they sit next to each other in the park's Crackaxle Canyon.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Road Runner Express (Six Flags Fiesta Texas) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Road Runner Express (Six Flags Fiesta Texas)
Interstate 10 West, San Antonio

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N 29.599149 ° E -98.612984 °
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Six Flags Fiesta Texas

Interstate 10 West 17000
78257 San Antonio
Texas, United States
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Website
sixflags.com

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Road Runner Express (Six Flags Fiesta Texas) 2
Road Runner Express (Six Flags Fiesta Texas) 2
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UTSA College of Engineering and Integrated Design
UTSA College of Engineering and Integrated Design

The UTSA Klesse College of Engineering and Integrated Design (CEID) houses The University of Texas at San Antonio's Engineering and Architectural, Construction and Planning programs. It was originally founded as the College of Engineering but was renamed to the Klesse College of Engineering and Integrated Design (CEID) in 2021.CEID provides undergraduate degrees in the fields of Biomedical Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Computer Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Construction Management, and Architecture & Planning. Graduate degrees are also offered in multiple areas, including Biomedical Engineering.As Engineering students reach their senior year, they must choose a concentration. A concentration is a more specific area in one's field of study, where the student is required to take classes in that concentration. For electrical engineering, the concentrations offered are control systems, computer engineering, and communications. The Engineering departments puts a heavy emphasis on engineering science and practical applications. Before graduation, an engineering student will have a firm foundation not only in the necessary mathematics, but also with computer applications that will be used in the engineering career field. In 2021 The University of Texas at San Antonio announced the formal launch of the College of Engineering and Integrated Design (CEID). The new college combines the academic departments and programs under the College of Engineering and the College of Architecture, Construction and Planning. On December 9 of the same year, it was announced that the college would be renamed after former Valero CEO William R. Klesse who donated $20 million to the university.