Water slide

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

A collection of water slides at Wet'n'Wild Gold Coast on the Gold Coast, Australia. The outer two are traditional inline tube slides while the centre three are body speed slides.
Water slide at Toledo Beach, Michigan, 1911
The Colony Park in The Colony
, Texas

A water slide (also referred to as a flume, or water chute) is a type of slide designed for warm-weather or indoor recreational use at water parks. Water slides differ in their riding method and therefore size. Some slides require riders to sit directly on the slide, or on a raft or tube designed to be used with the slide.

A typical water slide uses a pump system to pump water to the top which is then allowed to freely flow down its surface. The water reduces friction so sliders travel down the slide very quickly. Water slides run into a swimming pool (often called a plunge pool) or a long run-out chute. A lifeguard is usually stationed at the top and the bottom of the slide, so that if a rider gets hurt they will be treated immediately.

Traditional water slides

Two blue body slides, similar to playground slides, on the far side of a swimming pool
Simple body slides, into a large swimming pool
"Shoot the Chutes" at Wonderland Amusement Park in Indianapolis, 1906
A collection of inline tube slides at WhiteWater World on the Gold Coast, Australia
"Wild Water Rampage" at Dogpatch USA, an abandoned theme park in Marble Falls, Arkansas

Body slides

Body slides feature no mat or tube, instead having riders sit or lie directly on the surface of the slide. The simplest resemble wet playground slides.

There are a variety of types of body slides including flumes, speed slides, bowls and AquaLoops; the latter three are explained below.

Inline tube slides

Some slides are designed to be ridden with a tube which typically seats either 2 or 3 riders inline. Similar to a traditional body slide, these slides include many twists and turns and come in a variety of types including bowls, funnels and half-pipes.

Longest

The world's longest water slide was a temporary installation in

Vernon, New Jersey.[3]

The "Waterslide" at Buena Vista Lodge in Costa Rica is a 400 metres (1,300 ft) long water slide where the rider sits directly on the slide, with an inner-tube around their upper body for safety.[4]

The longest multi-person water-coaster (see below) is the 1,763 foot (537 m) long Mammoth at Holiday World in Santa Claus, Indiana.[5]

"The Longest" is a permanent single-passenger tube waterslide located in Selangor, Malaysia, at the ESCAPE family theme park. Visitors access the attraction via a cable car system and ride down the slide for approximately 4 minutes whilst navigating through 1,111 metres (3,645 ft) of scenic jungle.[6]

21st century water slides

AquaLoop

The first known existence of a looping water slide was at Action Park in Vernon Township, New Jersey in the mid-1980s, named Cannonball Loop. This slide featured a vertical loop but was repeatedly closed due to safety concerns.[7][8][9] In the late 2000s, Austrian manufacturer Aquarena developed the world's first safe looping water slide, known as the AquaLoop. The company engineered a slide with an inclined loop rather than a standard vertical one.[10] The slide is currently licensed and distributed by Canadian water slide manufacturer WhiteWater West.[11] There are nearly 20 AquaLoop installations around the world.[12] The first installation was in Slovenia in 2008.[13] The largest collections are located at Wet'n'Wild Gold Coast and Raging Waters Sydney in Australia, which both house 4 AquaLoops that opened in 2010 and 2013, respectively. Wet'n'Wild Gold Coast was also the first to install more than one AquaLoop at a single location.[14][15][16] The AquaLoop uses a trap-door to release riders down a 17-metre (56 ft) near-vertical descent at a speed of up to 60 kilometres per hour (37 mph). Riders experience 2.5 Gs in less than 2 seconds.[17] The whole ride is over within 7 seconds.[18]

Bowl

An example of a water slide bowl attraction

A bowl is a type of water slide where riders descend a steep drop into a round bowl. Under the effects of centrifugal force, the riders circle the outer area of the bowl before exiting down through the middle, often into a pool underneath but sometimes into an additional slide section.[19][20][21] This style of water slide comes in various styles and is manufactured by ProSlide,[22][23][24][25] WhiteWater West[26][27] and Waterfun Products.[28] The different variations can be ridden on a 4-person cloverleaf tube,[22] 2 person inline tube,[23][26] single person tube[24] or as a body slide.[25][27][28]

Family rafting

A family rafting water slide attraction at Formosa Fun Coast in Taiwan

Family rafting water slides have the largest capacity of all the different types of tubing water slides averaging between 4 and 6 riders per dispatch. Riders hop in a circular raft and travel down long, twisted 4.5-metre (15 ft) channels to the ground.[29] This type of water slide is manufactured by Australian Waterslides and Leisure,[30] ProSlide,[31][32] Waterfun Products[33] and WhiteWater West.[34] All of these companies manufacture open-air slides while ProSlide also manufactures an enclosed version.[32]

Funnel

ProSlide Tornado which is installed at almost 60 locations around the world dating back to 2003.[35] In 2010, WhiteWater West began developing a competing product known as the Abyss, utilizing a raft that holds up to six riders.[36]

The Half-Pipe

A half-pipe at the Serena Waterpark in Lahnus, Espoo, Finland

Similar to a funnel, a half-pipe features a slide in which riders oscillate back and forth. However, this style of ride doesn't feature any enclosed sections. On a Waterfun Product Sidewinder or Sidewinder Mini, riders oscillate several times before coming to a rest at the base of the slide. Riders then need to walk off the slide returning their tube to the next riders.[37][38]

A variation of the half-pipe called a boomerang slide typically has a steep enclosed section that exits to a wider upward-rising section that the rider then slides back down the other direction to the end of the slide.[39][40]

Multi-lane racer

A multi-lane racer at WhiteWater World on the Gold Coast, Australia

A multi-lane racer is a ride where between 4 and 8 riders dive head-first onto a mat and down a slide with several dips. As an additional component of this ride, some offer an additional enclosed helix at the top of the ride. ProSlide offer ProRacers,[41] Octopus Racers,[42] Kraken Racers[43] and Rally Racers,[44] while WhiteWater West have designed the Mat Racers[45] and Whizzards.[46] In 2016, WhiteWater West introduced the Mat Blaster, which combines the Whizzard model with elements of their MasterBlaster water coaster.[47] Australian Waterslides and Leisure have also manufactured a standard multi-lane racer.[30]

Speed slide

A speed slide at Beach Park in Brazil

A speed slide is a type of body slide where riders are sent down steep, free-fall plunges to the ground. Almost all water slide manufacturers offer a variation of this type of slide. ProSlide & WhiteWater West both offer a speed slide with a trap door, the same trap door found on the AquaLoop.[30][48][49]

Water coaster