Airplane Coaster
Airplane Coaster, known previously as the Aero-Coaster and the Aeroplane Dips, was a wooden [roller coaster|wooden] roller coaster which operated at Playland Amusement Park in Rye, New York, from 1928 until 1957.
History and design
The Airplane Coaster was designed by noted roller coaster engineer Frederick Church. For many years it was believed, based on past collaborations and similar design, that Harry Traver of Traver Engineering had built the coaster, but in the 1980s it was determined that Traver was not the builder. A researcher, digging through a Rye, New York attic, discovered plans that listed the actual builder as Frank W. Darling, the owner of LaMarcus Adna Thompson's construction company.Originally planned to be named "The Bobs", the coaster was first named "Aeroplane Dips" in honor of Charles Lindbergh's noted flight from New York to Paris. Over the next few years, the name was changed to "Aero-Coaster" and finally "Airplane Coaster". The coaster was the largest built at Playland. It had multiple levels with many spirals, as well as steep drops and curves. Most commented on were the bottleneck curves where multiple tracks seemed to converge. It had many similarities in design elements to The [Bobs (roller coaster)|The Bobs] at Riverview Park in Chicago, Illinois.