Hovercrafts have fascinated everyone since their invention in 1956 by Sir Christopher Cockerell. A hovercraft,
or air-cushion vehicle (ACV), uses air to break the bond between itself and the surface it moves over. By eliminating friction,
hover craft can glide over any smooth surface, moving directly from land over water, mud, sand, ice, snow etc.
Since it’s invention, many people have wanted to travel on a hovercraft, to experience it’s levitational
properties, and some people have even made homemade hovercraft.
For rescue purposes, hovercraft are ideal particularly in tidal areas where rising tides can trap swimmers, or low tide expose
walkers to the dangers of mud or quicksand, or in colder climates, where ice can crack on frozen lakes.
Hovercraft resemble vehicles that appear in scientific fiction journals, the concept of a amphibious vehicle
or hover car that mysteriously float over the ground and water using anti gravitational force captures our imagination, and
perhaps in future we will all travel on hover boards, until then we will have to put up with conventional transportation.
Making a hovercraft is relatively straight forward, and schools often encourage children to design their own hover crafts as part of a science project.
In 2004 Sir Richard
Branson, completed the 22-mile English Channel crossing from England to France in his $115,000 James Bond-like shiny blackAquada amphibious
sportscar craft in 100 minutes and six seconds, dressed in a dinner jacket and bow tie.
For those who cannot afford the time to build
their own hovercraft, a new generation of marine leisure personal hovercraft are available from specialist manufacturers;
such as the Hov Pod.