So You've Always Wanted a Hovercraft... (Video)
What little boy or girl never wanted a hovercraft? Something loud that could travel over water, pavement, maybe even over a plowed field or through a swamp? Ben King obviously wanted one, so after he grew up and got his PhD in physics and found a good job, he founded Lone Star Hovercraft. Timothy Lord interviewed Ben at the Austin Mini Maker Faire, and we also found some video of Ben flying (is that the right word?) one of his hovercraft on a lake that we spliced into the interview to liven it up a little. Vroom!
I'm not very fond of eels, and I'm afraid my hovercraft might get full of them.
Taking guns away from the 99% gives the 1% 100% of the power.
I have my hoverboard with jets at the side pre-ordered for 2015.
I miss the hovercrafts that used to cross the English Channel. Very cool machines that would make you throw up in anything but the calmest seas - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A02u03xhpPw . Victims of the EuroStar and other circumstances. You want fast, you go by train, you want low-cost, you go by ferry.
Although I have to say that the downside is that these are going to be just as annoying as jetskis, but in places where jetskis can't go.
The other day I had two share a beautiful, quiet, peaceful woodland with two irritating idiots on noisy little dirtbags. not nice.
no taxation without representation!
The word that you're looking for is hovering. As in "hovercraft".
When I was at school about twenty years ago some of the kids built a similar-sized hovercraft as a project and used to ride it around the playground. Given how cheap our school was, it can't have cost them much other than a second-hand engine and some wood for the body and fins and rubber for the skirt.
Recently I read an old Arthur C Clarke article from the 50s or 60s about how hovercraft were to be the future of transport and no-one would want wheels any more. I guess it just wasn't this particular future.
Plans for these have been around forever. Many, many people have built them.
hovercraft.com has many plans and kits for sale.
When my son was 9, he called me at work one day. "Dad, do we have a leaf blower?"....Yes..."Do we have a piece of plywood 4 feet wide?"....Yes. (I can see the wheels turning)...He goes on to list a bunch of other parts.
'Ok, dude....why?'
"I have a science project! I want to make a hovercraft!"
"OK then." He had gone online and found plans for a simple floating platform. No forward thrust, powered by a leaf blower.
It worked well enough to float my fatass down the driveway.
He got an A. My wife freaked out when I chose this as a teaching moment in how to use a circular saw.
When I was a teenager, the father of a wealthy school friend won a hovercraft in a card game. It looked quite similar to the one above. It was powered by a Bombardier snow mobile engine and was extremely loud. It would only hover when the fan was running, as the airstream for the hovering air came from a diverted stream of about 1/3rd of the prop wash air. Steering it felt a lot like trying to push one of those Ikea shopping carts that has four pivoting wheels...during a turn, you end up going sideways for a time. Going over water, it felt not unlike being on a loud boat or a seadoo. Going over land, it felt like being on a loud ground vehicle. The cool part came when we could drive it over a mud flat which alternated between sand and water. It really was an unusual sensation. The problem was that it ate fuel like crazy. It was far worse than a regular boat. The other problem was that when it came to a rest, the sand started to grind down the bottom. We did mitigate this by adding some fiberglass enforced wooden rails. Overall, it was great fun as a teenager, but even if I had the money to dump on such a toy, I doubt I would.
This and no other is the root from which a tyrant springs; when first he appears as a protector - Plato (423 to 327 BC)