All the rollercoasters now are pretty much the same- the typical stereotype is they go up a hill, down a hill, up a hill, down a hill, loop, station. And all the loops are made so that on a regular coaster, the G-Forces pull you down into your seat. Well, why not mix it up? My rollercoaster design begins like this: The car goes up the hill on a standard chain, and goes down a small (say 6 ft.) hill, then continues to drop. Eventually the car reaches 90 degrees, but keeps going. So the car does a compete loop like so. The resulting G-Forces will provide around 3-4 seconds of weightlessness. The only thing necessary is a strong safety harness.-- croissantz, Apr 27 2006 Picture http://img134.image...image=cheesy9rr.pngA really cheesy MS Paint pic to help you get the idea. [croissantz, Apr 27 2006] Max Immelman http://www.furball....d/ACM-immelman.html [normzone, Apr 27 2006] awesome idea...
however, the engineering behind it would be quite complicated you would think.-- pat2501, Apr 27 2006 For an aircraft would that be an outside loop, or an Immelman, or ? [off to research]
No, an Immelman is an outside loop that you roll out of at the top [link]
Ok, further research has left me confused, and I must go to bed now.-- normzone, Apr 27 2006 Nah, that one looks like a regular inversion loop with the difference that you're hanging below it on the outside rather than riding above it.-- jutta, Apr 27 2006 I can't help but wonder what the puke factor would be on a ride such as this. centrifugal force would keep this interesting.-- RockCrawler, Apr 27 2006 random, halfbakery