<P> The attraction features a stand - by, Fastpass+, and a single - rider line . The queue starts at the office of the fictional "Himalayan Escapes" travel agency, progressing to a replica temple with little holy figures . Visitors next enter a tea garden, followed by a room with equipment from a successful expedition, and then the "Yeti Museum", which contains information on the Yeti and a moulding of a Yeti footprint . There are also about 8,000 artifacts brought from the Nepal trip in the museum . The single - rider line skips all of the exhibits . </P> <P> The riders board the roller coaster in the model village of Serka Zong, to begin a speedy route through the Himalayas to the base of Mount Everest . </P> <P> The train departs the station to the right and climbs a small lift leading to a short drop, then circles around to the 118 - foot (36 m) lift hill, carrying the riders into the 199 ⁄ - foot - high (60.8 m) mountain . It is the tallest attraction at Walt Disney World, beating The Twilight Zone Tower of Terror by 6 inches . Disney keeps it just under 200 feet because law requires structures 200 feet or taller to have a blinking red light as a beacon for low - flying planes, which Disney feels would take parkgoers out of the experience . On the way up it passes through a ransacked temple with murals of the yeti, warning the riders that the mountain is his territory . At the top of the mountain the train curves around the main peak and goes through a cave . When it emerges, it draws to a halt in front of track that has been torn apart, presumably by the yeti . The train itself is held in place by a series of rubber tires while an automatic switch rotates the piece of track directly behind the train . The train then rolls backwards along a new route that spirals down through the mountain, coming to a halt in a large cave, where riders see the yeti's shadow on the wall as he tears up more track . This effect distracts riders from noticing another automatic track switch rotates in front of them . As the shadow moves away, the train rolls forward out of the mountain and down the main 80 - foot (24 m) drop . It enters a 250 ° turn and speeds back up through another cave in the mountain, where the roars of the yeti are heard once more . The train exits from the rear of the mountain and enters a large helix before being lifted back into the mountain a final time . The train drops through a cave, where the yeti is reaching down toward it . On reaching the bottom of this drop, riders return to the unloading dock and depart into a gift shop . One ride takes about 2 minutes and 50 seconds . </P> <P> Expedition Everest has six steam - like trains, each with six cars that together provide 17 rows seating two abreast, for a total of 36 riders per train . The trains are themed as the "Anandapur Rail Service" and are made to look old and rusty . Riders must be at least 44 inches (110 cm) tall and are secured by a lap bar . Up to five trains usually operate at once, but fewer can be used if guest demand is low . To create the illusion of a "steam powered" train, engineers placed vents under the station . When a train comes into the station, steam comes up through the vents and enters the loading platform . </P>

What is the biggest drop on expedition everest