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Mieders Alpine Coaster (with no brakes!!)

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Watch Here: http://youtu.be/iqCkICXWdWI
 
For some people the mere thought of skiing down a mountain is off-putting enough.
 
But this Austrian alpine-coaster offers what is perhaps the most frighteningly fast - and seemingly dangerous - downhill descent there is.
 
The single-pipe ride, which is located in Mieders, usually provides tourists with a slow, open trek down the mountainside. 
 
But one hardy adventurer recorded video footage of himself hurtling down the steep incline without applying the brakes.
 
The face of fear: The rollercoaster faces that these thrill seekers will want to forget
 
The result is a terrifying downhill plunge in small, open-topped car that appears to teeter on the edge of flying off the rail as it rounds tight bends.
 
Earlier this year, the world's steepest roller coaster opened in the shadow of Mount Fuji in Japan.
 
Brave riders on the Takabisha plummet 141ft in a single vertical drop Fuji-Q Highland Amusement Park.

Close to the edge: One brave person recorded video footage of himself hurtling down the steep alpine-coaster in Mieders, Austria, without applying the brakes

 
Close to the edge: One brave person recorded video footage of himself hurtling down the steep alpine-coaster in Mieders, Austria, without applying the brakes
 
More stately pace: The single-pipe ride usually provides tourists with a slow, open trek down the mountainside
 
But there is little time to enjoy the view of snow-capped mountain as the ride lasts just 112 seconds
 
The ride's designers even called in adjudicators from the Guinness Book of World Records, which ratified that the drop, involving a 121-degree freefall, is the steepest on any attraction anywhere in the world.
 
Takabisha, which translates as 'dominant' in English, relies on a combination of gravity and a set of linear motors on the cars. These accelerate the coaster to speeds of 100kmph.