It's 60 years since the British inventor Christopher Cockerell demonstrated the principles of the hovercraft using a cat food tin and a vacuum cleaner. Great things were promised for this mode of transport, but it never really caught on. Why?
The hovercraft slides down a concrete ramp and into the Solent. Its engines, propellers and fans hum as it crosses from Southsea, in Hampshire, to Ryde, on the Isle of Wight, travelling 4.4 nautical miles in under 10 minutes.
The journey is more than twice as quick as the catamaran from Portsmouth to Ryde and more than four times as quick as the Portsmouth-to-Fishbourne ferry.
For that matter, why haven't hydrofoils caught on?
(Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Wednesday November 11 2015, @03:37PM
I've taken the Beetle [jrbeetle.co.jp] from Pusan to Fukuoka a couple times, and it's awesome. It's smooth and it takes about 3 hours. I've done the same trip via regular ferry and it takes overnight and you get pretty seasick. You could well imagine something like it working well between Miami and Havana or similar.
Washington DC delenda est.