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HOVERCRAFT

1. INRODUCTION

Vehicles designed to travel close to but above ground or water. These vehicles are supported
in various ways. Some of them have a specially designed wing that will lift them just off the surface
over which they travel when they have reached a sufficient horizontal speed (the ground effect).
Hovercrafts are usually supported by fans that force air down under the vehicle to create lift, Air
propellers, water propellers, or water jets usually provide forward propulsion. Air-cushion vehicles can
attain higher speeds than can either ships or most land vehicles and use much less power than
helicopters of the same weight. Air-cushion suspension has also been applied to other forms of
transportation, in particular trains, such as the French Aero train and the British hover train.

Hovercraft is a transportation vehicle that rides slightly above the earth’s surface. The air is
continuously forced under the vehicle by a fan, generating the cushion that greatly reduces friction
between the moving vehicle and surface. The air is delivered through ducts and injected at the
periphery of the vehicle in a downward and inward direction. This type of vehicle can equally ride over
ice, water, marsh, or relatively level land.

2. HOVERCRAFT

2.1. HOVERCRAFT HISTORY


The first recorded design for a hovercraft was in 1716 put forward by Emmanual Swedenborg, a
Swedish designer and philosopher. The project was short-lived and a craft was never built.
Swedenborg realized that to operate such a machine required a source of energy far greater than any
available at that time. In the mid-1870s, the British engineer Sir John Thornycroft built a number of
model craft to check the air-cushion effects and even filed patents involving air-lubricated hulls,
although the technology required to implement the concept did not yet exist. From this time both
American and European engineers continued work on the problems of designing a practical craft. In
the early 1950s the British inventor Christopher Cockerell began to experiment with such vehicles,
and in 1955 he obtained a patent for a vehicle that was "neither an airplane, nor a boat, nor a
wheeled land craft." He had a boat builder produce a two-foot prototype, which he demonstrated to
the military in 1956 without arousing interest. Cockerell persevered, and in 1959 a commercially built
one-person Hovercraft crossed the English Channel. In 1962 a British vehicle became the first to go
into active service on a 19-mi (31-km) ferry run.

2.2. CREATION OF HOVERCRAFTS


When building a hovercraft it is imperative that you are sure you have a firm grasp of the
important concepts and principles involved. An elementary knowledge of physics is required. Ease of
use, cost, availability and safety are all significant considerations when building a hovercraft. Care
must be taken in selecting a motor and propeller for the proper function and stability of the hovercraft
and to meet your needs for thrust and lift. A good skirt design is essential for stability and of course,
body designs must be well thought-out in order to meet your needs for speed and stability. Finally,
the rudders must be well weighed out in order to avoid weighing down your hovercraft and also well
shaped in order to move air as efficiently as possible.

2.3. HOW DOES A HOVERCRAFT WORK


Hovercrafts work on the two main principles of lift and propulsion. When
dealing with a hovercraft, the existence of lift is imperative for the proper function of the vehicle. Lift
is an essential factor because it is that which allows the craft to ride on a cushion of air several inches
off the ground. This process, the process of attaining lift begins by directing airflow under the craft. In
order to quarantine the air under the air cushion, a skirt is required. This is done in order to create
pressure under the hovercraft which forces the vehicle off the ground. Attaining the proper amount of
airflow is imperative for the maintenance of the craft’s stability. If too much airflow is directed under
the craft, it will then hover too high above the ground, resulting in the hovercraft to tip. Not enough
lift will cause the craft to remain on the ground which defeats the very purpose of the hovercraft
altogether. The source of the airflow which propels the craft of the ground is a fan. The fan can be
used for lift and thrust. It can be dedicated to lift or thrust or even both simultaneously. In either case
the passage where the air flows through to reach the air cushion affects the stability of the hovercraft.
This passage is a hole located on the base of the craft. Another vital component is the motor. The
motor is usually located in the rear of the vehicle and is the heaviest of the components. Due to the

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weight of the motor, extra pressure is required under the area where the motor is positioned in order
to attain hovering capabilities.
That which makes hovercrafts so efficient and different from other vehicles of its category is
that very little force is required for it to move. Propulsion is that which makes the craft move. The
source of this effect is the fan, which is used to move the air for propulsion. However odd as it may
seem, the fan produces more than enough force for the hovercraft to move. This is achieved through
the existence of another major factor:
Hovercrafts have no contact with the ground; therefore any resistance the ground may produce under
other circumstances is now non-existent for the craft. As explained above, the propulsion of the craft
requires a fan but a normal fan is not sufficient. This is because a normal fan does not blow air
straight back. Instead it spins the air in a spiral shape. Therefore engineers decided to use turbines or
stationary blades, that un-spin the air. When air does not spin more of its kinetic energy can be used
for translation and less is required for rotation.
The shape of the body also affects the stability of the hovercraft. The larger the area of the
base, the more stable it will be. Wider base implies greater stability. Longer and narrower shapes
increase speed but decrease stability. Most hovercrafts have rounded ends, and offer both stability
and speed.
The skirt is another vital component. The common skirt is known as a bag skirt. It is
comprised of a bag that covers the bottom of the base and has holes in it to allow air to escape and
push the craft off the ground. Each part of the skirt inflates independently which makes repairs much
easier and improves stability. Unfortunately, the more stable a skirt, the slower it will go.
When the hovercraft is finally able to move it will most definitely require steering capabilities.
This is achieved through the use of rudders. These rudders can be controlled by a variety of devices
including computers. Rudders cannot be too heavy otherwise they will weigh down the craft because
they are located very close to the motor. The shape of the rudder dictates how well it will be able to
move air.
When riding a hovercraft the natural state of motion is easily seen to be constant vector
velocity with a constant rate of rotation. A sloping floor will definitely change your velocity vector
without changing your rate of rotation. In addition to Newton’s three laws of motion it will become
obvious that to avoid spinning or tilting the hovercraft you must apply the forces in line with the
center of mass of the combination of the craft and your body.

2.4. PARTS OF A HOVERCRAFT


2.4.1. Lifting Fan
Firstly the volume of air needed is very large and a propeller is designed to be most efficient
in open air like on an aircraft. Also the fan needs to force air into the chamber below the craft so
creating a specific pressure under the craft. Propellers again are not efficient in applications when an
air backpressure will be applied to the propeller blades as they rotate. Because of this the lifting fan
on most Hovercraft uses what is known as a centrifugal fan. This is a fan in which two discs and fitted
together and looks rather like a doughnut with angled slats at their edges.

When the assembly is rotated at high-speed air is sucked into the center hole in the fan and
the slats force it out at the edges. The advantages of the fan are two fold. They operate efficiently in
an environment when backpressure is high and they will move larger volumes of air for a given
rotation speed than a propeller with the same speed and power input. The lifting fan is coupled via a
gearbox to the engine. The engine also drives the propeller on the craft, which provides thrust for
forward motion of the Hovercraft.

2.4.2. Thrust Propellers


The propeller used to drive the hovercraft along is usually an aircraft type with variable pitch blades.
Its speed of rotation must remain fixed to that of the engine and the lift fan. This is because the
amount of lift air required dictates the engine speed to drives the lift fan. In turn the amount of
propulsion, which the propellers provide, must be obtained by varying the propeller pitch and not its
rate of rotation. This system is termed 'integrated lift/propulsion'. A Hovercraft having more than one
lift fan and propeller generally has a separate engine for each fan-and propeller unit.
The propellers used on hovercraft can vary from four-bladed versions and about nine feet in diameter
on the smaller craft to the four propellers on the SRN4 cross-Channel hovercraft. These are four-
bladed and nineteen feet in diameter! On the SRN 4 the pylons on which they are mounted can be
rotated to change the direction of thrust. On smaller craft, rudders like on aircraft, are used for
direction control.

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2.4.3. Momentum Curtain


When early models were built and analysis was done on the airflow using the plenum chamber type
of hovercraft it showed that there were problems with stability. In addition the craft would require
enormous power to maintain a reasonable hover height.Stability of the hovercraft on its cushion of air
remained a real problem despite some design efforts and a new approach was needed. To solve these
problems, a plenum chamber with a momentum curtain was developed by Sir Christopher Cockerall.

2.4.4. Hovercraft Skirt


Despite the momentum curtain being very effective the hover height was still too low unless great,
and uneconomical, power was used. Simple obstacles such as small waves, or tide-formed ridges of
shingle on a beach, could prove to be too much for the hover height of the craft. These problems led
to the development of the 'skirt'.
The skirt is a shaped, flexible strip fitted below the bottom edges of the plenum chamber slot. As the
hovercraft lifts, the skirt extends below it to retain a much deeper cushion of air. The development of
the skirt enables a hovercraft to maintain its normal operating speed through large waves and also
allows it to pass over rocks, ridges and gullies.

The skirt of a hovercraft is one of its most design sensitive parts. The design must be just right or an
uncomfortable ride for passengers or damage to the craft and the skirts results. Also, excessive wear
of the skirt can occur if its edges are flapping up and down on the surface of the water. The skirt
material has to be light flexible and durable all at the same time.

For the skirt to meet all of its requirements the design and use of new materials has slowly
evolved. The current skirts use ‘fingers at the lower edge of the skirt envelope which can be unbolted
and replaced. By doing this there is a quick and easy way to counter the effects of wear without
having to replace the whole skirt structure. A shocking example of the costs is the replacement of the
skirt assembly on the SRN 4’s which used to cross the English Channel from the UK to France. The
replacement cost for a set of skirts for this craft is over 5 million US Dollars.

2.4.5. The Engine


The SRN 1 and other early hovercrafts used piston type engines. As models like the SRN 4 and SRN 6
were brought into service they tended to favor the use of gas turbines. This type of engine is smaller
and lighter for a given horsepower and has been used extensively in turbo prop aircraft.

The engine has a main shaft on which is mounted a compressor and a turbine. A starter
motor is connected to one end of the shaft and the other end is connected to the lift fan and propeller
gearboxes. Both compressor and turbine look like fans with a large number of blades.
When the engine is started, the compressor compresses air from the engine intakes and
pushes it into combustion chambers mounted around the engine. Fuel is squirted into the combustion
chambers and ignited. The compressed air then rapidly expands as it is heated and forces its way out
through the turbine to the exhaust. As the gas pressure rises, the turbine speeds up, thereby driving
the compressor faster. The engine speed increases until it reaches the engine's normal operating
speed.
However, the use of these engines results in a very high level of engine noise outside the
craft. In the SRN 6 this meant that it was possible to hear the craft traveling across the Solent
between Portsmouth and the Isle of Wight in the UK several miles away. With the newer generation of
craft close attention was paid to engine noise and fuel efficiency. The current AP188craft that runs on
the old SRN6 routes has now moved back towards piston engines and uses marine diesel engines that
are much quieter and fuel efficient.

2.4.6. Air box


The box-like structure at the rear of the hovercraft, right behind the propeller, the box-like structure
is called an air box. The air box takes about 10% of the air being pushed backward by the propeller
and forces it downward, underneath the hovercraft. There are three small ducts cut into the base of
the hovercraft, underneath the air box. Two of these ducts lead into the skirt, which is basically a bag
that goes all the way around the perimeter of the craft, while the third duct leads directly underneath
the hovercraft.

2.5. HOVERING POWER

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Take a hovercraft which, complete with crew, fuel and load, weighs 2,000 pounds (lbs.), and
is 15 feet (ft.) long and 7 ft. wide. Its area would be 15 ft x 7 ft. = 105 square (sq.) ft.
If the craft is to hover, the pressure of air forming the cushion must be 2,000 pounds or
greater. This represents 19 pounds. Per sq. ft. Yes, only 19 pounds per square feet is required to lift
the hovercraft which seems much smaller than you might imagine. From existing designs of
Hovercraft that have been developed, it is possible to make some simple estimate of the power
needed to lift a Hovercraft. Using 19 pounds per square foot it is estimated 4 horsepower for each sq.
ft. of curtain or skirt area can maintain that hover.
Curtain area is its length times its height. A hovercraft 15 ft. long by 7 ft. wide would have a
curtain length of 44 ft.-twice the length plus twice the width.
If we want it to hover one foot high we would need sufficient power to provide a curtain of
44 x 1 sq. ft. At 4 horsepower per sq, ft. we would need 176 horsepower Just to lift the craft up to
hover one foot above the ground. Don't forget we now need to push the craft along as well so that
engine is the minimum size we can use.

2.6. RUDDERS
When the hovercraft is finally able to move it will most definitely require steering capabilities.
This is achieved through the use of rudders. These rudders can be controlled by a variety of devices
including computers. The rudders must be well weighed out in order to avoid weighing down your
hovercraft and also well shaped in order to move air as efficiently as possible.
Rudders cannot be too heavy otherwise they will weigh down the craft because they are located very
close to the motor. The shape of the rudder dictates how well it will be able to move air.

2.7. HOVERCRAFT OPERATION


Piloting a hovercraft is an interesting proposition. Since very little of it actually touches the
ground, there isn't much friction, making it very difficult to steer and also very susceptible to strong
winds. Imagine trying to drive around on top of an air-hockey puck! We've discovered that the best
way to drive it is treat it like a jetski, i.e. leaning back and forth and steering very carefully. It is also
possible to do a 360-degree turn without stopping, which is quite a sight.

2.8. AERODYNAMICS
Aerodynamics is defined as the branch of fluid physics that studies the forces exerted by air or other
gases in motion. Examples include the airflow around bodies moving at speed through the
atmosphere (such as land vehicles, bullets, rockets, and aircraft), the behavior of gas in engines and
furnaces, air conditioning of buildings, the deposition of snow, the operation of air-cushion vehicles
(hovercraft), wind loads on buildings and bridges, bird and insect flight, musical wind instruments,
and meteorology. For maximum efficiency, the aim is usually to design the shape of an object to
produce a streamlined flow, with a minimum of turbulence in the moving air. The behavior of aerosols
or the pollution of the atmosphere by foreign particles are other aspects of aerodynamics.
3. CONCLUSION
Hovercrafts are generally simple mechanisms in theory. Yet the process from theory to
manifestation is not as easy as it may seem. A plethora of problems exist and must be faced in order
to attain a well functioning hovercraft. The plans and designs must be flawless. One must take under
consideration the weight and the shape of each component in order to avoid problems such as
instability and dysfunction. This is a marvelous machine which greatly cuts down the friction which in
turn helps it to attain greater speed and more stability.

Varieties of problems and factors have to be taken into account in designing and constructing a
hovercraft. The difficulties involved in maintaining stability and functional competency has limited the
application to only transportation or for military purpose. The cost involved in the developing of a
hovercraft is also another impediment to the widespread use of this machine.

4. REFERENCE

1. www.quicktechhobby.com
2. www.hovertechnics.com
3. www.rescuehovercraft.com
4. www.edufive.com/seminartopics.html

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