Three feet. ~.9 meters.
By doing DAK After Hours, I spent one of my seven rides in a row looking back at where we put our backpacks and stuff. One can clearly see the extent of the vertical motion of the theater that way. Noting the highest and lowest points against the unmoving wall. Then standing next to it and noting where those points hit my body. Then measuring those points against my body... it's three feet.
You almost constantly being thrown upward and then the theater 'drops' to catch up. Up and down and up and down over and over.
It's the visual cues (and the wind and spray) that tricks your brain into thinking each drop is a hundred feet and not three.
By doing DAK After Hours, I spent one of my seven rides in a row looking back at where we put our backpacks and stuff. One can clearly see the extent of the vertical motion of the theater that way. Noting the highest and lowest points against the unmoving wall. Then standing next to it and noting where those points hit my body. Then measuring those points against my body... it's three feet.
You almost constantly being thrown upward and then the theater 'drops' to catch up. Up and down and up and down over and over.
It's the visual cues (and the wind and spray) that tricks your brain into thinking each drop is a hundred feet and not three.