Why Most Hovercraft Have Disappeared
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How does hovercraft work? How can it break ice, similar to an icebreaker? Why did the military first loved the idea of hovercraft, but then forgot about it? Any why did hovercraft became extremely popular as passenger ferries, and then completely fail? This is #NotWhatYouThink #NWYT #longs
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@Thedrbobishere
Жыл бұрын
First
@johndc2998
Жыл бұрын
No way you live in Canada too! Cheers from Mid east brother
@michaelmccarthy4615
Жыл бұрын
Canada doesn’t seem to be pulling their weight in global defense…. ;)
@tillycatcat
Жыл бұрын
This video is one of my least favourite - wayyy too long and jumps around different topics with no clear journey from start to finish. Maybe these should be a two chapter affair in future.
@Thedrbobishere
Жыл бұрын
@@tillycatcat hey no one caresssssssss
So the hovercraft just kinda goes out on icey rivers and basically does doughnuts and "burnouts" and whatnot? Looks like a really enjoyable job!
@25mm25
Жыл бұрын
That's what I thought! Looks like a lot of fun!
@membranealpha5961
Жыл бұрын
i imagine the feeling of driving it would be a truly unique feeling
@robertkerr4199
Жыл бұрын
It looks like fun, yeah. And if you like paperwork more than screwing around in a hovercraft, it's a great job! If it was a private company, the job would probably be one of the best in the world, but Environment Canada runs these, and you don't want to work for the Canadian government.. Unless you like putting 30 years of your life into job, just to get screwed out of your pension... :( Search and rescue is where it's at, if you want work as a hovercraft operator, or doing line inspection up in the skeg.
@bluedragontoybash2463
Жыл бұрын
need some Tokyo Drift soundtrack.
@TheOMT
Жыл бұрын
It reminds me of my mum defrosting the freezer with the vacuum cleaner exhaust
They never told me in school that I could've been an ice-breaking hovercraft captain paid to do donuts down on the river. I think my counselor was pretty narrow minded.
@Wolfsschamane
Жыл бұрын
Or your counselor knew that winter doesn't last long enough for this job to be necessary more often than 1-2 months a year. What you really should ask yourself is what the hovercraft pilots do the other 10 months a year.
@dwavenminer
Жыл бұрын
@@Wolfsschamane Search And Rescue...
@Wolfsschamane
Жыл бұрын
@@dwavenminer Possible, if search and rescue is often enough necessary in that area. Maybe they use regular boats most of the year for that but it's certainly not doing donuts on a frozen river with a hoverboat.
@procatprocat9647
Жыл бұрын
Well as you live in the Sahara desert, maybe they were right....
@DeltaInsanity
10 ай бұрын
@@Wolfsschamanehave you ever considered not everyone lives in the same climate as you? Many places have more winter months than summer months.
Chapter suggestions (for those interested to skip to a section): 0:00 Intro / Not What You Think 1:47 Hovercraft basics 3:11 Modern Hovercraft Development, SR-N1 5:04 Two Important Innovations from SR-N1 6:41 Advertisement: War Thunder 7:37 Passenger Hovercraft Ferries (SR-N4) 9:45 Technological Dead-End 11:17 The reality: useful in specific situations 12:10 Canadian Cost Guard icebreaker hoverboats 13:38 Military landing craft 14:41 Surface-Effect ships / 100kt Navy 15:53 Zubr 18:18 American LCACs & Expeditionary Transfer Docks (ESDs) 21:45 Closing & Outro Advertisement
@yasminbarry7941
10 ай бұрын
Thank you for taking the time to do this. So ..... Why did they disappear?
@EmperorDank
10 ай бұрын
@@yasminbarry7941 Its explained in the video
@yasminbarry7941
10 ай бұрын
@@EmperorDank : Thank you. I should stop doing several things at the same time.
@alpiekaar
5 ай бұрын
if only I read this first
I travelled across the English Channel in 1982 by hovercraft and it was fantastic. The captain announced "our flight today will be at an altitude of six feet". The ride was fast and smooth and not noisy as stated in the video.
@NotWhatYouThink
Жыл бұрын
Interesting! A few people commented that their experience was in fact very noisy. Maybe these were different hovercraft?
@theharper1
Жыл бұрын
@@NotWhatYouThink maybe people have forgotten how noisy most aircraft were in the 70s. I've been on plenty of one hour flights in Turboprops which weren't exactly peaceful. The SR4 was never going to survive the completion of the Chunnel anyway, but I'm glad that I got to experience that flight. :) PS If people are comparing the noise level with a ship or a train rather than a propeller driven aircraft, they're crazy.
@ericrawson2909
Жыл бұрын
Used it many times. Normally very fast. One time the sea was rough. Crossed the channel at half speed. Half the passengers were clutching sick bags!
@theharper1
Жыл бұрын
@@ericrawson2909 no doubt I was lucky to have good weather!
@syntheretique385
Жыл бұрын
@@ericrawson2909 was a kid when I visited England with my dad in the early 80s. Trip was a breeze on the way to Dover but on our trip back the sea was a little rough and I noticed some passengers feeling sick. Still was one of the most exciting moments of my childhood!
Another advantage is that they're pretty good at not triggering mines. Lower magnetic signature for naval mines, and very little surface pressure for land mines.
@TheMonkey747
Жыл бұрын
Except the kind of mines with prong triggers...
@Wolvieonepunch
Жыл бұрын
Yep that would be important😅😅😮
@GYI5U
Жыл бұрын
Ah yes I saw this explained in the documentary "James bond 007 die another day"
@stefflus08
Жыл бұрын
It does nothing to lower magnetic signature other than moving the hull a few meters away. Material choice is much more important, because magnetic triggering is much more advanced than it used to be. Hovering can reduce or eliminate shockwave coupling between water and hull, which is a bigger deal than the more visually spectacular side of a naval mine explosion. And it can be done so it makes very little acoustic signature for mines that trigger by sound. But the propeller driven models fail in that regard.
@cvr527
Жыл бұрын
@@TheMonkey747 The prong triggers are from small anti-personnel mines.
The CCG’s hovercraft are not only icebreakers but are also genuinely great SAR platforms. And their crews are great to work with.
@nickgoodall578
Жыл бұрын
The hovercraft is cool, but so are helicopters, and a helicopter can perform a rescue on Georgia straight or on grouse mountain. I suppose the hovercraft could too, it just takes ages to drive one all the way up mountain highway from Burrard Inlet!
@Comnlink
Жыл бұрын
@@nickgoodall578 oh the folks from the 442 are lovely and some of the best at their jobs there is. But the hovercraft and the Helicopters do different jobs, same with the MLBs and RHIBs. And together they do a better job than either of them could do on their own.
@Fortnightenjoyer
Жыл бұрын
Sar???
@theangryotaku3361
Жыл бұрын
@@Fortnightenjoyer Search And Rescue
@jaquigreenlees
Жыл бұрын
@@Fortnightenjoyer SAR is the abbreviation for Search And Rescue. Which is the most frequent task for the Canadian Coast Guard here on the West Coast.
One of my most treasured memories is my grandad taking me to the seaside to see the hovercraft. The volume and scale of it was mind-blowing. When we got back he challenged me to a drawing contest, which he obviously dominated. Problem was that I was like a 7 year old, and he was one of the top electrical engineers in the country that CERN kept on trying to scout to follow-up on some 10kA switches he designed for them but he wasn't interested in leaving his village. He had a minor leg-up in technical drawing skills
I love how they basically just said "yeah, the optimal way to use this thing is to do drifts and burnouts"
@JebAlert
8 ай бұрын
They are actually very fun to race for that reason in the few racing games that feature them such as The Crew 2.
For Christmas of 1989 I received a one and a half foot-long, remote controlled hovercraft. It was a challenge to control but a lot of fun. However, given that industrial/commercial/military strength hovercraft skirts are relatively easy to damage, I'm sure you can imagine how much easier the skirt on a much smaller, toy hovercraft would be. I managed to keep my hovercraft up and running for about a year, but in addition to the eventual skirt damage, like so many remote-controlled vehicles of the time, the rechargeable battery-pack steadily lost its rechargeability, so the hovercraft would start dying out in less and less time. This aspect almost saw my hovercraft sink into a small creek near where I lived at the time, (Illinois, USA).
@nos9784
Жыл бұрын
No emergency flotation construction by using styrofoam or something? Huh. Well, mine didn't either, but we made that for classroom experiments. Circular, ~3'3", with a car battery, two camping mattress blowers, and room for one person. That was fun!
@reinhard8053
Жыл бұрын
I also have such a toy. It is really fun to go on different surfaces. And it has a styrofoam body which floats. You can observe every slightly uneven road as the hovercraft goes to the side of the slope if you slow down.
@skyden24195
Жыл бұрын
@@nos9784 nope, no back-up floatation implements. I remember that when my craft started to lose power in the creek, I yelled for my younger brother, who was standing closer to the creek, to jump in and save it. Of course, he just looked at me like I was crazy. Fortunately, there was enough power to get the craft closer to the edge where I could reach it without having to put more than one foot into the water. (This happened in late fall/early winter, so the water was very cold.)
@skyden24195
Жыл бұрын
@@reinhard8053 those little things where part of the challenge. When I first got my craft, the ground was covered with snow, so it made it pretty easy to drive the craft over what was usually grass and what not, just as long as the slope wasn't too steep. But no styrofoam body on mine. If it sank, it sank.
@thepessimisticoptimist9375
Жыл бұрын
I had this toy as well. Does anyone remember the name. I remember it was neon yellow/green. It was called the Typhoon made by tyco. I got it for Xmas in 92 I think
I’ve always been fascinated by these things… in 2019 we had a massive Navy hovercraft “storm” our beaches here in Warrenton Oregon twice, once to bring supplies from a ship sitting out in the ocean and a second time to bring troops, all as a training exercise. It was the coolest thing I’ve ever seen!!
@bc-guy852
Жыл бұрын
Are the beaches and coastline there similar to what they'd have in Taiwan?
@S.E.C-R
Жыл бұрын
@@bc-guy852 I don’t know what they’re like in Taiwan, but our coastline is described as “rugged”. It depends on location, but we do have nice beaches, it’s usually too cold and windy to do much though.
@hippiesaboteur2556
Жыл бұрын
Yeah I grew up here in eastern north Carolina, where our coastline is nearly almost entirely flat, low-lying expanses between the ocean/intracoastal waterway, estuaries & salt marshes, or swamp. The majority of the terrain almost anywhere throughout the outer banks (which for the most part are very low, narrow & skinny chain of coastal islands, and form a protective natural barrier that runs the entire length of NC's coast. between neighboring barrier islands, typically one island's northern-most tip & the southern-most tip of the other, are the waterways connecting fresh inland waters to the ocean, and also contain channels for maritime traffic, allowing for passage between intracoastal or inland waterways, local or private harbors/docks/slips, & the 3 state ports to & from the open ocean and much larger, deeper main sea lanes) is by and large mostly long, wide, flat, open sandy beaches. This exact kind of geography was particularly chosen right before the second world war by the War Department (now the Department of Defense) as the best location to build & utilize as Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, the perfect place on all the east coast of the US, and most ideal type for amphibious operations, especially with regards to LCACs. From my childhood to this day, I've lost count of how many times I was spending a day at the beach with family or friends, there would be US Navy ships anchored a few miles off-shore, and all of a sudden multiple LCACs and AAVs (amphibious assault vehicles aka Amtraks) would come into view on the horizon, and within a few minutes would pull up onto the beach, sometimes just a few hundred yards down the beach from the rest of us where Navy Seabees would be waiting for their arrival. they'd drop ramp and Marines, their gear & vehicles would disembark and proceed further inland, and then those LCACs would fire their engines back up again and return back to ship... All of this in a matter of a couple minutes. Truly an impressive sight, that is, when you weren't at times having to cover your face & eyes to keep from being sand-blasted by the excessive amounts of beach sand kicked up whenever their engines were still running wide-open. Totally worth it though to be able to watch all that kind of stuff, especially from that far away
@FYMASMD
9 ай бұрын
@@rachejohnson5427it must suck to be you. Of course when you need help where will you be? In the city where there are hospitals and people to help you.🙄
@mr.person1219
6 ай бұрын
I assume these places are in America...? Unless these are countries
i remember one year that the ice broke up on Lake Simcoe while people were out there ice-fishing. It was one brave cottager that used his private hovercraft to rescue most of the stranded fishermen. I don't remember how the rest were rescued but there were no fatalities.
Some places still use hovercraft as both cargo and passenger ferries. There are communities located in remote area's where the only access often is ice road in winter, and hovercraft in summer. marsh/bog/permafrost tundra can be very inaccessable during the summer and many of the rivers are unusuable because of shallows. So in cases like this hovercraft transports come in very very useful.
@grahamsmith9541
Жыл бұрын
There is still a passenger hovercraft service. In England between Southsea in Portsmouth and Ryde Isle of Wight. With crossings every half an hour. Its been running since 1965.
The SR.N4 were really loud. I remember sailing in the North Sea near the coast of Belgium in a fog and hearing what seemed to us a C-130 flying extremely low. I turned out to be the ferry approximately 60 nautical miles away. The fog made the sound carry way further than we expected.
@renefrijhoff2484
Жыл бұрын
What would you expect with 4 gas turbine engines with a total of 3800 shp or 2800 kw power and 4 19 feet or 5.8 meter diameter variable pitch props (Mk. III).
@michiellombaers3198
Жыл бұрын
@@renefrijhoff2484 Yeah, fair enough but 60 freakin' miles? It really surprised me.
@derekdekker9685
Жыл бұрын
I dont think the British coast is 60 Nm away
@renefrijhoff2484
Жыл бұрын
@@derekdekker9685 Nope, it's about 33,1 km or 17,87 Nm.
@michiellombaers3198
Жыл бұрын
@@derekdekker9685 Correct. The hovercraft was leaving Calais and we were on the edge between Flandres and the province of Zealand.
I'm so ferry surprised this video came out...
@theshinywaffle
Жыл бұрын
I see what you did there 😅
I used to see the zubrs passing by when I was serving the Hellenic Navy. The noise is very distinctive and can be heard from far.
@nolesy34
Жыл бұрын
Noise from hell
I'm a geologist who does a lot of work on large, salt lakes in Australia. A number of efforts have been made to use hovercraft for transport across these salt lakes....even to the point of making hovercraft mounted drill rigs. These efforts all failed, unfortunately. The salt crust on most of these salt lakes is so rough and jagged that the hovercraft "air skirts" tended to shred quickly, thereby requiring frequent replacement. This became prohibitively expensive and eventually killed the project. We're currently looking to revive the concept with a very specialised hover drill rig. We're looking to fit an aluminium rim around the base of the air skirt to resist abrasion from the rough lake surfaces. There will be no forward propulsion for this rig. It is simply a skirt and fan designed to make the rig hover. The rig (weighing approximately 20 tonnes) can then be pulled along slowly by a light ATV type tracked vehicle. The aluminium rim scratches along on the top of the jagged salt, protecting the skirt. If we can make it work, our life will get a whole lot easier.
@creatorchris712
8 ай бұрын
Why cant the new skirt with the aluminum be used while the rig has forward propulsion ?
@ohlordy2042
8 ай бұрын
@@creatorchris712 It probably could....anything is possible with enough money and effort. However, in the interests of making it as cheap, simple and low maintenance as possible, there will be no forward propulsion. A lack of propulsion is no real loss to the versatility or usability of the rig, anyway. It typically spends months on individual projects drilling fairly closely spaced holes, so only needs to be moved long distances on a handful of occasions in a year. And, by making it "weightless" with an air skirt, towing it long distances over the lake is no major logistical challenge.
Being an ice breaking hovercraft driver looks like such a fun job
@gaveintothedarkness
Жыл бұрын
True, but your career never goes forward. It just goes around in circles.
@idk-zi3gw
Жыл бұрын
@@gaveintothedarkness bruh
@Leo-gt1bx
Жыл бұрын
They can not break ice it is a click bait title
@gravityhypernova
Жыл бұрын
@@Leo-gt1bx it would be click bait except for you know, the clips showing hovercrafts being used to break thinner ice.
@noneofyourbeeswax01
Жыл бұрын
Boss: _"Ok, today we need you to get your sweet ride out on the river and do a bunch of donuts, handbrake turns and Akira slides"_ Driver: _"Not again... can't you get Joe to do it?"_
The Portsmouth-Isle of Wight Hovercraft is brilliant. Taking a walk on the promenade in my home city and seeing it take off to IOW is still cool to this day, over 20 years since I first saw it.
@joestandby28
Жыл бұрын
Well, hello from the other side 😂
@niktimes3
Жыл бұрын
I never thought we’d see Portsmouth on her, not what are you think video
@joestandby28
Жыл бұрын
@@niktimes3nor the island but this is the second one I noticed he previously mentioned in another video about RAF ventnor
@bennytsb5719
Жыл бұрын
I love seeing it do drifts as it leaves Southsea 😂 very fun
@conorthompson943
Жыл бұрын
It's brilliant, so long as the wind doesn't pick up too much!
The ESD is an incredible amount of capability for the money. As we saw in the Haiti earthquake, where all docks were destroyed, there was no shipping ability other than flight ops. These ships create a virtual port wherever the ship to shore connectors may land. These ship ships are very well built and probably not too expensive to maintain considering their capabilities. Just like the mercy, and the comfort
@lancerevell5979
Жыл бұрын
I was thinking this. ESDs and hovercraft are perfect for getting supplies and emergency responders onto the beach after a hurricane, earthquake, etc.
@kennethsteiner3331
Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately the EDS is being phased out.
@tyrlant2189
Жыл бұрын
It must be expensive, why keep a fleet of hovercraft if you can use a shallow hull boat or helicopter or something?
@fuzzy8593
11 ай бұрын
Epic profile pic.
@ikevorisek1517
4 ай бұрын
I'm trying to think of who the commander and chief of the US was in 2022 that would eliminate the only way to connect 2 ships for maximum advantage. Couldn't be the same guy that led the phenomenally successful withdrawal from Afghanistan. Or the guy that drained the strategic oil reserves. Or the guy that let terrorists shoot at bases and ships for multiple weeks before responding. It's not possible it's the same guy because this president is the most intellectually enabled individual that ever led the country and I don't believe that he would do anything to endanger the citizens of Ukraine and getting all of our weapons reserves into their hands.
I use the Isle of Wight / Southsea hover crossing on a regular basis. It's still the quickest way across the Solent.
The France/UK Hovercraft was VERY successful for cross channel transport. They did not go out of service due to hiccups, they went out of service because the channel tunnel opened... they were excess to capacity. Additionally the Hovercraft service to the Isle of Wight still operates Daily from Southsea to Ryde in 10 minutes. They are used where the topography makes them best fit for purpose transport. They are Not a failure for Passenger and car ferries.
@christophertelford
Жыл бұрын
The SR.N4 operated regular services between 1968 and 2000. It always annoys me when people focus on the end of life of such a vessel and then call it a failure despite over 30 years of successful operation. I feel similarly about Concorde.
@renefrijhoff2484
Жыл бұрын
Agreed, though there is also 1 other aspect that made an and to the SR N4 hovercrafts. They contained 4 Rolls Royce 3800 shp gas turbo engines (the Mk. III anyway) which burned 1000 gallons an hour at a cruise speed of 50 knots. Max. capacity was 8068 gallons.
@kramelbbiw
Жыл бұрын
The video does cover all of your points later - it's a pity they included that incorrect assertion at the start :-/
@westrim
Жыл бұрын
He said literally all of that.
@DrMJT
Жыл бұрын
@@westrim Yes he mentioned them but with the Title of being absolute failures... he did not use the narrative to properly or adequately defend his supposition / Title!
15:53 - 15:57 "Meanwhile on the other side of the globe, yeah I said it flat earthers." 😂
There’s a video game I love called Homeworld: Deserts of Kharak, about the crew of a desert version of an aircraft carrier. If they made a similar game based in our world I think it would be a hovercraft carrier.
small mistake: hovercrafts don't hover with newtons 3rd law, they hover by creating a high pressure zone of air between them and the ground. The craft can't touch the ground (or water) because the high pressure air is stuck between the ground and the hovercraft. They don't fly because if you remove the ground, the air can move freely out from under the craft. hope this makes sense
@mkvv5687
Жыл бұрын
I noticed that. Like you say, it's ground-effect. He does eventually mention that.
@Leo-gt1bx
Жыл бұрын
And neither do they break ice
@fukkitful
Жыл бұрын
The video is correct. The air being forced down, pushes the craft up. For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.
@fukkitful
Жыл бұрын
@@mkvv5687 The video is correct.
@coned07
Жыл бұрын
@@fukkitful no, thats how helicopters work. I'm sure maybe at most 10% of the force keeping it up is newtons 3rd law, but most of it is just the hovercraft 'sitting' on the bed of air.
I crossed the English channel eight times or so on the hovercraft. It definitely wasn't smooth, and it equally wasn't quiet. But I found the trip time short enough for sea-sickness not to be a problem. But if the train had been an option at the time, I'd have used that instead, once the hovercraft's novelty wore off.
@grizzlygrizzle
Жыл бұрын
It wasn't very scenic, either, with the windows spattered with salt spray. I found it mostly unpleasant, with the noise and all, but it was fast. I've taken traditional ferries, fast catamaran ferries, and even a hydrofoil ferry, and all of them were more pleasant.
@cptrelentless80085
Жыл бұрын
It was a shitty ride, cramped and uncomfortable inside
@sylviaelse5086
Жыл бұрын
@@grizzlygrizzle Yes, I remember being pleased that I'd bagged a seat at the front, only to discover that one could see very little.
I went on the small Portsmouth to Isle of Wight hovercraft ferry in the 1960s. One way was in a storm and it sure was bumpy. The craft lifted cornerwise and crashed back down. Seats were no more than a covered boards and hard. I was glad to get back on land. Even the normal ferries can be quite frightening in a storm despite it being only a narrow channel. Yes, done that too.
@martindunstan8043
Жыл бұрын
They're much bigger and far more comfortable here now I promise, all fancy with union jack/flag livery✌️
Hovercraft are also well suited to be used as lifeboats in tidal estuaries where they are well suited to sandbanks and very low water depths. We have them at Southend on the River Thames.
@jerry2357
Ай бұрын
There's one at Morecambe, too. The sands of Morecambe Bay are treacherous, and the tide comes in fast (remember the Chinese cockle pickers tragedy), so an RNLI hovercraft is ideal.
I have seen in the late 90-s the russian Zubr in Black Sea at the full speed. It was awe inspiring spectacle and as noisy as hell!
@olenickel6013
Жыл бұрын
Let's hope it's not next on the list of spare soviet equipment Putin wants to send into the Ukrainian meat grinder.
@avrahamkrichevsky4831
Жыл бұрын
@@olenickel6013 certainly so!
@ramblingrob4693
Жыл бұрын
@@olenickel6013 just shoot a rocket launcher at the prop or skirt job done
Hovercrafts are not immune to causing sea sickness. I took one of the last crossings of the Channel by the big hovercraft, the weather was at the very edge of causing the crossings to be cancelled. The hovercraft was going up the one side of the waves and crashing down the other, everyone looked green. My friend's father who had invited us on the crossing, was talking loudly about the French Patisseries we would be visiting to sample the cream cakes. Bastard. Lol. It was a great crossing, we had to come back by ferry that was much worse in that weather.
@danskkr
Жыл бұрын
So true! I've never been as seasick as i have aboard a hovercraft to calais. It was not just that we were bouncing over 2m waves, but the fact you couldn't go out on deck for fresh air. Thankfully it was only 30 min trip but i felt sorry for whoever had to clean up the toilets after!
@westrim
Жыл бұрын
He made that clear in the video at 8:38
@marksavage6041
Жыл бұрын
@@danskkr I think you'll find that your incorrect about being able to go on the outside deck of the Hovercraft. It would have been physically impossible as they didn't have outside decks. I think you'll find that you where taking about the 71m SeaCat Service that was operated by Hoverspeed. My proof for backing it up is that I worked for them as Terminal and Onboard Staff.
@danskkr
Жыл бұрын
@@marksavage6041 It was Dover to Calais and I think it was Hoverspeed so you are more of an authority then me for sure! But it was seriously choppy, I had a hangover and just remember being so seasick and feeling trapped in the cabin desperate for some fresh air. The hover craft was bouncing over the waves the whole way - if there was a deck it probably wouldn't have been safe in those conditions and they may have locked access to outside?
@ericrawson2909
Жыл бұрын
The plural doesn't have an s. Like the plural of aircraft is aircraft. Also one canon, many canon. I guess in the end no one will notice that another grammar rule has changed. Thanks to the presenter for getting it right.
The big hover crafts from England to France did not fail because of hiccups, they failed because they lost their cash cow(Duty Free shop) was taken away from them, and then came the Chunnel. It became very successful for years.
@hamentaschen
Жыл бұрын
You know what was very successful for years? Me and your momma! I tell you what.
@Nicky_Nacky_Nooo
Жыл бұрын
You obviously did not listen to what was being said in the video.
@mxk6104
Жыл бұрын
He literally mentions all of this in the video.
@jkacvbhijfn
Жыл бұрын
Tell me you didn’t watch the video without telling me you didn’t watch the video
@hamentaschen
Жыл бұрын
@@Nicky_Nacky_Nooo You obviously did not listen to was being said by your momma... about me! And she be fine! Oh! Yeah!
I read that another advantage of hovercraft is that they produce so little ground pressure said they don’t trigger mines. Great for beach landings where the enemy has had time to prepare.
@paul756uk2
6 ай бұрын
I live in Portsmouth on the south coast of the UK and nearby in Lee on Solent back in the early 70s was a unit set up called the interservice hovercraft trials unit. It was created to test and evaluate the potential use of hovercraft for use in the military. Ie navy and army. One of the tests they did was using the BH7 for testing the effects of mines on hovercraft. I have video of some of this stuff. Not sure if any of it's on KZread. Coincidentally, there's been a hovercraft museum for quite a while now and it's in the very same location and that BH7 is there together with a number of other craft including 2 of the SRN4 cross channel hovercraft. I actually watched one of them come in which had to use mobile blowers as it was unserviceable. The hovercraft had to cross a road to get from the sea to the base so traffic had to be stopped. I believe you can see the BH7 on street view.
The Isle of Wight hovercraft are now diesel powered craft. They are far more fuel efficient than the old gas turbine powered craft like the SRN-6. The SRN-6 looked cool though and rode quite well!
I have loved these machines for decades, ever since I was a kid. Yet I had never heard about their use as riverine icebreakers. Even though here in New England I am well aware of the damage potential of ice dams. Thanks for that.
I look forward to your vids all week long my man!
I rode on the hovercraft from Dover to Calais in 1973. I was a teenager who grew up on the Atlantic Ocean, so it was a huge thrill for me, especially when we left the channel and flew over land to the terminal. Too bad they're gone, but the operating and maintenance costs must have been horrendous.
"how often do you need to travel over swampy areas, traverse from [water] to land, or over ice?" I mean, I would definitely use that ability if I could.
@kerwinbrown4180
Жыл бұрын
Alaska would love it as would some parts of Canada.
@ATASD
4 ай бұрын
@@kerwinbrown4180Unfortunately neither Alaska, nor Northern Canada currently have hovercrafts in active commercial operating
@kerwinbrown4180
4 ай бұрын
@@ATASD I wonder what the negatives of commercial hovercraft are.
@ATASD
4 ай бұрын
@@kerwinbrown4180 Significant noise and stability of most of the hovercrafts.
@kerwinbrown4180
4 ай бұрын
@@ATASD thank you.
I nearly got to work on a new stealth hovercraft a local company is making for the Australian military.
@micaiahfonken
Жыл бұрын
oooo that sounds cool af
@Crashryding
Жыл бұрын
‘Is’ making or ‘was’ making?
You didn't mention but there are two combat hovercrafts in Russian Navy at the Black sea. They are called Bora and Samum and belong to completely different kind of hovercrafts. They don't have skirts and cannot transit from the sea on the shore. But they are still very fast and carry ship-to-ship missiles.
@AdverDoiren
6 ай бұрын
Samum is a different type of hovercraft, called Surface Effect Ship or sidewall hovercraft. This video is basically about Cockerell's design and its derivatives and mostly ignores other types of hovercrafts, that were created since circa 1910-s.
I served on hovercraft in the US Army. During the 80's and early 90's the Army operated the LACV-30 which stood for "Lighter, Air Cushion Vehicle, 30-Ton. (Lighter refers to a vessel that is used for transferring cargo from ship to shore, not it's weight or size.) The LACV-30 didn't really live up to its 30 ton name, because you had to count the fuel as part of the weight, and as I remember, we could carry 3000 gallons of fuel, which ate up a big chunk of the cargo capacity. It burned about 250 gallons per hour. We used to joke that it's primary mission was to convert JP-5 (aviation fuel) into noise. We were very good at that. Sometime in the mid 90's the Army got out of the hovercraft business and sold them off. I do get to tell people that I was an Army naval aviator though. Definitely one of the stranger jobs in the Army.
@KevinSmith-ys3mh
10 ай бұрын
Operating from Army LST`s? Another oddity the US Army is trying to offload, along with air cargo transport as so I have read!
@NWChickenDad
10 ай бұрын
@@KevinSmith-ys3mh The Army didn't have any LST's. We would cooperate with the Navy if we needed to be hauled somewhere. The Army did have 5 LSV's (Logistical Support Vessel) which were 275' landing craft, as well as a 375' landing ship called the "McHenry". We also had 1600 and 2000 class LCU's, as well as LCM 8's (Mike boats) and various tug boats and barges. Quite the little navy. Most of it operated out of Ft. Eustis, VA. I was stationed down the road at Ft. Story, VA, where we had two hovercraft companies, as well as a unit operating the LARC-LX, a giant boat/truck with wheels.
Had the GI Joe hovercraft. Shit was sick
That deflating balloon demonstration is absolutely underrated. Just stellar.
@anthonyjackson280
Жыл бұрын
that was a science experiment when I was in gr6 (~1970) but with a cardboard disk and an empty cotton reel to support the balloon. It fascinated me for a couple of weeks.
@DerekRoss1958
Жыл бұрын
Yeah but. It's not how a hovercraft works. The CD/Balloon blows air through the middle. A hovercraft blows air round the edges. Doesn't sound like it matters but it does. It gives extra height. And that extra height allows the hovercraft to be used on rougher terrain whereas the CD only works on smooth surfaces.
@anthonyjackson280
Жыл бұрын
@@DerekRoss1958 It is still a ground effect machine (generic term, by rights 'Hovercraft' is a trade name) the first prototype DID blow down the middle (see video), during development it was discovered that peripheral air discharge was more efficient (also in video); then skirts were added to further increase efficiency . Conventional aircraft also generate added lift from ground effect when close to the ground caused by the air deflected down by the wing reflecting back up.
We still have public hovercraft services here in the UK between Southsea (in Portsmouth) and Ryde, it's a 10 minute crossing and worth it just to say you've been on a hovercraft. I went on it as a child and remember sitting at the front seeing us head towards ships at speed because the driver knew that ship wouldn't be there by the time we got there and we'd pass right behind it over the bowl wave. Very noisey too.
In the late 70s, I used to work for a family who had their fingers in a lot of pies, one of those pies being a small hovercraft with some form of innovation to protect the skirts/steer, that is to say from what I can remember, there were side panels that could be raised and lowered. One of these prototypes can still be seen in the grounds of a pub in Devon, UK, the Turtley Mill at Avonwick.
I think the Ekranoplan also deserves a mention in the video. Although not a hovercraft per se, it still uses the ground effect to move. Yes, I know it's Russian but I can't deny they look extremely cool.
@Redicule_research._ridiculous
Жыл бұрын
The Baltic sea monster
@Mark_Bridges
Жыл бұрын
@@Redicule_research._ridiculous Wasn't it the Caspian Sea monster?
@Leo-gt1bx
Жыл бұрын
That is a true ground effect vehicle
@ngauruhoezodiac3143
Жыл бұрын
They operated only in the Caspian Sea and were never used in combat so their usefulness is debatable.
@anthonysoto2923
Жыл бұрын
What's wrong with it being Russian?
This might seem a bit random but I don't think I've ever realised how lucky I am to have been on a hovercraft. (Funnily enough I have the same surname as Christopher Cockerell and used to live on the Isle of Wight where the first hovercraft was tested.)
I remember driving these things in Just Cause 2 & GTA San Andreas and being blown away that a vehicle could go anywhere on the water or land and not be slowed down or stopped by either!
@draculastraphouse7863
Жыл бұрын
Lmao GTA San Andreas was my first thought when the video started
The one thing I remember from my one trip from Pegwell Bay in Ramsgate to Calais was the really load noise but the big advantage was the very short crossing time
I used to live by the st lawrence river. Always loved to see the hovercraft break up the ice. Man these beasts are loud, fast and really effective.
Very good vid...I enjoy in-depth reviews like this.
The jet thrust from those fans is negligible, the ground effect is doing all the work. Those fans basically only pump enough air to maintain high static pressure, they're much different from fans optimised for high-speed exhaust.
@robertball3578
4 ай бұрын
There's two sets of fans, one is high static pressure for lift and one is for propulsion. I had a 16' hovercraft in early 2000's to support gold mining, Subaru aluminum 86 HP engine with a 6' diameter ultralight aircraft adjustable pitch prop with a large belt reduction drive and a drive off the front for the lift fans. Payload was 1,000 lb, hovercraft weighed about 900 lb as I recall.
Been on a hovercraft about 25 years ago, it operated as a tourist tour boat in Broome, Australia. Was a great tour and the owner did love to show off.
Hovercraft have another benefit that the military likes, they can go over minefields as the ground pressure is low enough not to detonate mines. The LCAC's motto is " No Beach Out of Reach".
Great Video, I had no idea about the ice breaking capability. Very cool.
I was literally playing war thunder during the ad and I lost a wing as you said things actually got destroyed
@NotWhatYouThink
Жыл бұрын
Sorry for your loss 😜
In the 60's my father was a fleet airarm pilot based at HMS Daedalus. I can remember he was invoved with the Royal Navy's assessment of hovercraft. I believe they built a slipway and a set of traffic lights to allow access to the Solent from the airfield. Since the UK lacks large wetlands, tundra or ice fields they were a bit of an expensive way of doing things.
Mekong Delta was probably the place where hovercraft use made the most sense. Huge swampy area where overgrown swamp and river channels come hand by hand and where no constant roads were ever built - basically this was the golden land for hovercrafts.
@ATASD
4 ай бұрын
Why it was? It doesn't exist anymore?
You're in Canada!? Awesome to see us so well represented on KZread! Greetings from Ottawa!
Another super presentation clear concise and extremely detail
My grand mother had a hovercraft in her house in the mid 1950's made by Hoover as a three year old I could ride on it despite it not being made for that purpose, later on in life I crossed the channel in a hovercraft.
Another big difference between hovercrafts and aircrafts is hovercrafts are often full of eels where as in aircrafts it's often snakes.
@milesarcher.
10 ай бұрын
Only in Hungary will you find hovercraft full of eels.
There are actually a couple of old 1980s tabletop wargames (Helltank and Helltank Destroyer) that postulated a near-future where warfare included surface effect ships as tank and infantry transports. Bit optimistic about that technology, but they also had armed ground effect vehicles acting as mechanized scouts, which also hasn't come to pass. There's also the somewhat earlier and much better known Ogre and GEV games, which again included both armed and infantry transport hovercraft - in their case, justified by tech breakthroughs in power systems, ultralight "bi-phase carbide" armor, and widespread use of railguns that made the GEVs the best option for long range scouting since helicopters and aircraft die the moment they clear the horizon. The Hammer's Slammers novels (and the games spun off from them) are probably the best known "hovertank" franchise, with 170+ ton armored juggernauts plated with irridium armor and using fusion engines to support their mass and give them good mobility. That one's set far in the future though, with interstellar colonies and loads of brushfire wars involving hired mercenaries from high tech planets. Fighting against them with the kind of primitive local gear your average colony can build locally is sure death so whichever side in a conflict can afford the better mercs tends to win. It's pretty grim as settings go.
@shadowslayer205
9 ай бұрын
There's also Battletech, in which realism-inspired hovercraft are a staple of the light armored/utility vehicle class.
My brother worked on L-CACs in the Navy while I served on an aircraft carrier. He never really talked much about it, though. Maybe I'll share this video with him.
This brings back memories, as my dad worked for Hoverloyd in the 70s and 80s. Did a couple of trips across the channel, and it was loud, but I never had an issues with feeling sick as a youngster. I also had the chance to help direct a hovercraft into the departure/arrival area at Hoverloyd’s terminal. Unfortunately, these amazing machines were always very expensive to run, and the Channel Tunnel took away their speed advantage.
Hovercraft are still used in the UK by the RNLI to rescue people trapped on the vast mudflats around parts of the UK coast . They can reach areas inaccessible to conventional lifeboats or land vehicles.
2:01 Hovercraft do not hover based on Newton's Third Law: Action & Reaction. They hover because the air pressure below them is greater than air pressure above them.
My hovercraft is full of eels.
@rodrigogirao8344
10 ай бұрын
Do you want to come back to my place, bouncy-bouncy?
Thank you. Very well presented post regarding the pros and cons of ACV technology.
our military (Finland) had only one hovercraft ever. they started it only ONCE, and then decided to get rid of it. it was meant to be somekind of quick response commando or whatever unit's vehicle, but having a machine that can be heard about 100 km away kinda dampens the idea of sneaky soldiers....
It's pretty cool that for icebreaking spinning around like crazy is actually the best way to do it.
The norwegian shield class ship is a surface effect ship in service right now. Top speed is classified but wiki lists it at 60+ knots.
Thanks for sharing video, fantastic as when I was boy my dad took me "Princess Anne " across to France was great love the noise and bumping rides over rough channel, fond memories !
A commercial application of hovercraft technology that is *always* overlooked in videos is the Hoverbarge. These have been used successfully for decades to move cargo weighing 200 tons or more to remote locations that are otherwise inaccessible.
I've taken a hovercraft across the channel, it was incredibly uncomfortable, like being in a paint shaker. The chunnel is much, much more comfortable and more convenient.
If the Hovercraft's downsides can be mitigated it'll be a hell of a tool for whoever pulls it off.
13:33 This has to be the coolest job on the planet. Drifting around in a huge hovercraft. with air conditioning and maybe even a coffee maker while preventing flooding form harming the environment
Best job in Canada? Hovercraft Ice Breaker driver. That just looks like a lot of fun.
On the Isle of Wight they are still used as passenger ferries
@Merthalophor
Жыл бұрын
where is that?
@soysauce6977
Жыл бұрын
@@Merthalophor off the coast of England
@FallenDRA
Жыл бұрын
@@Merthalophor 2:07 is one being talked about here
@NotWhatYouThink
Жыл бұрын
Yes, we mention that too. But hovercraft failed as a passenger ferry service.
@NotWhatYouThink
Жыл бұрын
🥉
🤔Hmm. I guessing The Black Tusk from The Division 2. Must've solved the "Hovercraft problem".. Lol. Them damn things are as big as Aircraft Carriers.
Bering Marine Corp runs one/some in AK. Dad built a 16' one, small ones are super simple, low hp, fuel efficient as far as watercraft go and pretty capable, but wind drift is a nuisance in a breeze and can get dangerous with strong gusts.
Oh man, I remember those giant bright red & yellow & black & white SR.N4s were a huge deal when I was a little kid in Belgium and it was so exciting when I finally got to ride one across the Channel to visit the UK, I still have a mental image of our car driving up inside it. I always wondered what happened to hovercraft as I got older, I hope they have their day again with better skirt materials & engines (or totally new ideas no one's thought of yet).
It’s very cool driving from LA to San Diego and watching the Marines training with LCAC’s coming ashore. Luckily (for me cause I liked the view) we were stuck in a traffic jam for an hour or so. It was very, very cool seeing Harriers and Cobra’s, AAV7 and LCAC as well as all the Marines coming ashore. Definitely something I still remember clearly from 25 years ago. Something I’ll go to my grave with a clear picture of.
@cruss4612
Жыл бұрын
I've done those amphibious assaults. From the AAVs and LCAC. It is not a fun ride for most people, but I loved it.
I went on a hovercraft from Portsmouth to the Isle Of Wight
@NotWhatYouThink
Жыл бұрын
🏆
@Balthorium
Жыл бұрын
I rode the SR hovercraft from France. It was insane. I remember seeing the French one under repair.
Another use for hovercraft in Canada and Alaska is to resupply mail, fuel and groceries to small towns in winter that don't have access to a runway and are right next to a river. Rivers are like naturally occurring roads when they are iced over. When the ice is thin on the river, it is about the only way to resupply these towns. Once the ice is thicker, trucks and snow machines can drive on the ice to supply these towns.
I remember getting to see an LCAC simulated landing as a kid it was crazy.
Sailing up the Saint Laurent on a container ship (same week as the ocean ranger) our boat was ice strengthend and at Québec there was a wee ice breaker stuck solid. Being nice guys we took the time to break it out. Hovercrafts couldn't do that.
For me the greatest hovercraft is the one made by the three in Top Gear.
@Leo-gt1bx
Жыл бұрын
Horrible show
Interesting that the speed limiter is the air cushion not collapsing. With the advances in material science and nano structures I imagine at some point they'll make a skirt that unfolds really easy from the inside but nearly impossible to fold in from the outside which would enable silly fast hovercrafts.
I did one ride on a cross-channel hovercraft. I agree with all your comments and would like to add one - the sea spray prevented you from looking out. At that time Hydrofoils started and they were much better. Probably they failed as well - an idea for a future video? Also Ferries are much better than people think. For truck drivers that multi hour break is a valued rest stop
fansea... i'm dead... XD
I still think a SRN4 sized hovercraft could be viable, if it was SES. That is a hybrid hovercraft, with the solid sides going into the water. Only the front & back have flexible skirts. This is much better in choppy seas. It also lets you have propellers going into the sea like a ship. This is no longer amphibious, but it lets you run on cheap diesel engines rather than expensive gas turbines.
Thanks for spending the time to create and share this content 🤙🏾
I wonder what happens when a hovercraft runs over a person sleeping on a beach or swimming in the water. Deaf people go to the beach, too, you know.
@hoverbovver
Жыл бұрын
There was an incident when a SRN4 ran over someone collecting fishing bait far off shore. He would hardly have felt anything. But the skirt would have knocked him flat. I have deliberately been under a hovercraft for research purposes and the air pressure and speed is so low you barely notice it.
@NoahSpurrier
Жыл бұрын
@@hoverbovver that’s pretty cool. So you could, in theory, lie down flat on a beach and have one of these things run over you without harm.
I watch those LCAC's coming and going everyday at work. Theyre pretty cool and look like a blast to operate. And you can hear them for miles!
I remember my first trip, as a schoolboy, on a Hovercraft featured here - 1966/7 from Hasting beach for a 20 minute ride around the bay!
ngl you made me laugh at "yeah i said it flat earthers" 15:54
I appreciate the home video of the CD. Going the extra mile will keep the channel going.
driving that icebreaker hovercraft has to be the best job. just doing donuts all day.
Thanks for the great video. Well done! Would you consider doing a video about the US Navy Pegasus class hydrofoil ships?
I rode on an SR-N4 channel hovercraft at least once when I was a kid. I remember it looking absolutely ginormous, but of course everything is when you are 4. I do remember the hovercraft moving right up onto the beach.