Your article on the hovercraft (Backpage, 28 July) shows again how a brilliant
To my knowledge both the
The government-backed development group is not the only
A company called Hovertrans has developed and built several diesel electric, fan-based hover barges suitable for payloads of up to 500 tonnes, using fan air pressures of less than 70millibar (one psi). They are essential where oil exploration and drilling needs to be carried out in countries with vast areas of swampland and the frozen wastes of northern
These barges are not self-propelled and rely on various means of towing and winching to traverse difficult terrain. This unique ability makes the hover barge the only vehicle available for moving very large units of engineering equipment in these areas.
You may be interested to know that a 250 tonne payload hover barge, (pictured below) - specifically built to operate in temperatures of -60C - was recently built at the Ferguson Shipyard in Port Glasgow, where it is being completed.
David McCullagh
Port
In view of your ‘This week in 1965’ feature and the recent TV series, Ice Road Truckers, may I suggest that if there was ever an ideal application for a low-ground pressure all-terrain vehicle capable of carrying 100 tonnes, then this is it.
Hovercraft may be noisy and expensive, but surely they are less expensive than the £20m it costs to build the
Many thanks for an excellent read.
Howard Bradfield
Materials engineer
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