Devil's wheel

A Devil's wheel, Teufelsrad, Human Roulette Wheel or Joy Wheel[1] is an amusement ride at public festivals and fairs. Devil's wheels have been used at Oktoberfest celebrations since at least 1910.[2]

Devil's wheel during the Oktoberfest in München

Overview

A Devil's wheel is a rotating circular platform upon which riders sit or lie. It begins by spinning slowly and increases its speed to make riders slide off the platform. Spectators stand around the platform, the announcers often offer some satirical commentary.

Riders who slide off the platform usually hit a cushioned wall. Injuries are possible if riders collide with spectators or other objects. An operator controls the speed of the platform, sometimes slowing it down to give participants the opportunity to re-position themselves toward the center.

Function

A boy sliding to the edge of the wheel; a ball is seen.

The Platform is a disc. It is not an inertial system because of its rotation. The riders' sense of balance is compromised by the rotating disk. This complicates movement towards or away from the center of the wheel. If one is moving radially outward, in addition to the expected centrifugal force (directed outward), the Coriolis force applies directed tangentially (i.e. laterally).

Versions and use

A smaller version of the Devil's Wheel was displayed at EXPERIMINTA Science Center FrankfurtRheinMain in December 2011.[3] Devil's wheels is still a part of the Munich Oktoberfest and in the Taunus Wunderland.[4]

Elements may be added to the Devils Wheel to make it even more difficult for the riders to hold on. A ball attached to a chain may swing at them or the ride may shake.

In Evelyn Waugh's first published novel, Decline and Fall, the character Otto Silenus describes a Devil's Wheel (referred to as the "big wheel at Luna Park") as a metaphor for life.

gollark: You said something about the picture as a URL.
gollark: Really, though, it doesn't matter much if you upload the pictures or not. Nobody will care if in a year or so the link is dead.
gollark: You can't catch your own?
gollark: Well, yes, if the thing you have a URL for goes down your image won't work.
gollark: No idea. It's magic.

References

  1. Joy Wheel - Dingle's Fairground Heritage Centre
  2. "Teufelsrad". Oktoberfest.
  3. "Neue Experimentierstation "Teufelsrad" in der "Experiminta" in Frankfurt". Experiminta ScienceCenter. 2012-01-05. Retrieved 2014-05-10.
  4. Wunderland.de/attraktionen/action/teufelsrad/ Teufelsrad. Auf: Taunus Wunderland.de. Abgerufen am 10. Mai 2014
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.