The vertical loop is not a recent roller coaster innovation. Its origins can be traced back to the 1850s when
centrifugal railways were built in
France and
Great Britain. The rides relied on
centripetal forces to hold the car in the loop. One early looping coaster was shut down after an accident. Later attempts to build a looping roller coaster were carried out during the late 19th century with the
Flip Flap Railway at
Sea Lion Park, designed by Roller coaster engineer Lina Beecher. The ride was designed with a completely circular loop (rather than the teardrop shape used by many modern looping roller coasters), and caused neck injuries due to the intense G-forces pulled with the tight radius of the loop. The next attempt at building a looping roller coaster was in 1901 when Edwin Prescott built the
Loop the Loop at
Coney Island. This ride used the modern teardrop-shaped loop and a steel structure, however more people wanted to watch the attraction, rather than ride. In 1904, Beecher further redesigned the vertical loop to have an even more elliptical design with
Olentangy Park's Loop-the-Loop. Vertical loops weren't attempted again until the design of
Great American Revolution at
Six Flags Magic Mountain, which opened in 1976. Its success depended largely on its
clothoid-based (rather than circular) loop. The loop became a phenomenon, and many parks hastened to build roller coasters featuring them. In 2000, a modern looping
wooden roller coaster was built, the
Son of Beast at
Kings Island. Although the ride itself was made of wood, the loop was supported with steel structure. Due to maintenance issues however, the loop was removed at the end of the 2006 season. The loop was not the cause of the ride's issues, but was removed as a precautionary measure. Due to an unrelated issue in 2009, Son of Beast was closed until 2012, when Kings Island announced that it would be removed. On June 22, 2013,
Six Flags Magic Mountain introduced
Full Throttle, a steel launch coaster with a loop, the tallest in the world at the time of its opening. , the largest vertical loop is located on Flash, a roller coaster produced by
Mack Rides at Lewa Adventure in Shaanxi, China. The record is shared by a
hypercoaster in Turkey's Land of Legends theme park (named 'Hyper Coaster'), built in 2018, which is identical to Flash at Lewa Adventure.
Loops on non-roller coasters In 2002, the Swiss company Klarer Freizeitanlagen AG began working on a safe design for a looping water slide. Since then, multiple installations of the slide, named the
AquaLoop and constructed by companies including Polin, Klarer, Aquarena and
WhiteWater West, have appeared in many parks. This ride does not feature a vertical loop, instead using an
inclined loop (a vertical loop tilted at an angle), which puts less force on the rider. AquaLoop slides feature a safety hatch, which can be opened by a rider in case they do not reach the highest point of the loop. == Physics/mechanics ==