Six Flags Schuyler Lake/Harley Quinn Spinsanity

History
The ride was first announced on August 20, 2004.

The coaster opened on May 30, 2005 as "Tedy McCorrmick's Tornado Coaster" originally themed around a tornado ravaged town. It was rethemed to Tony Hawk in 2008 and the coaster reopened as Tony Hawk's Big Spin on May 5, 2008.

The coaster became generic under name of "Skatepark Spin" for the 2011 season due to Kennywood Entertainment Company buying the park.

After Six Flags bought back the park, the coaster was rethemed to Harley Quinn from the "Batman" comics and a Flash Pass lane was added.

Layout
The coaster starts with a 135-degree left turn into a 105-ft tall lift hill. After the lift, the ride turns to the right and descends down an 88-ft tall swerving drop into a vertical loop, bizarre for a spinning coaster.

Stats

 * 105 feet tall
 * 88 foot drop
 * Vertical loop
 * Tunnel over the ride's entrance
 * Flash Pass available

Ride sponsors

 * WHAM-TV (2005-2007)

Trivia

 * The roller coaster was originally planned to be all indoors, but only the queue line, station, and Flash Pass line/exit area/gift shop were the only indoor portions to be built.
 * The old Viper station is now used as a restroom complex next to the coaster's station.
 * The second floor of the station (the loading platform) still remains, but it is currently abandoned.
 * In the roller coaster's conceptual artwork and 2004 teaser video the coaster's cars were themed to TV news vans. The TV news van themed cars never made it to the final product.
 * The ride's queue line had TV monitors originally playing videos of the history of WOKR/WHAM-TV, the monitor close to the queue line entrance played a safety guidelines video. The videos on the monitors was changed to history of skateboarding when the ride became Tony Hawk's Big Spin. The TV monitors were SBNO after it became Skatepark Spin and were finally removed as part the queue line's remodel into a funhouse theme.
 * Several pieces of old attractions used to rest next to the attraction, but were removed after the 2007 season.
 * Space Point's old tower base was re-used as the entrance building for the queue and overhead tunnel, being attached to the newly built enclosed queue/station/exit area/gift shop building as a result.
 * The vertical loop frame from the old Fireball shuttle loop ride was reused for the vertical loop. The track was replaced to accommodate the spinning coaster cars and the old neon flame tube lighting was removed.
 * The old arch supports from Steel Beast were used for the ride's indoor que line entrance and gift shop exit.
 * Riders exit through the gift shop.
 * The gift shop was there before the roller coaster was built. It opened in 1992 as "WOKR News Store 13" from 1992 to 2004, later it was known as the "13 WHAM News Store" from 2005 to 2007.
 * The preexisting gift shop is adjacent to the former 13 WHAM News Experience studio which stood mostly vacant ever since the attraction closed in 2007.
 * The maintenance transfer track still sports the original dark blue track color.
 * The tunnel had a faux billboard with a bust at the exit of it like some of the Italian Job/Backlot Stunt Coasters.
 * From 2005-2009 the coaster's cars had video cameras on board and rider had the option to buy a video or a still photo of their ride.
 * During the coaster's first operating riders had an option to buy their on-ride video on a VHS tape or a DVD.