It is not generally realised that the ground effect
principle on which the air cushion vehicle is based
was first expounded by a Scandinavian scientist some
hundred years before Sir George Cayley grasped the
basic principles of flight and two hundred and fifty
years before the hovercraft went into commercial
service. The basic principle of the air cushion
vehicle is extremely simple, but, as in many
branches of engineering, simplicity of principle and
ease of achievement do not go hand in hand!
How does a hovercraft hover? Let us take a vehicle with
a weight of 1000 lb (454 kg) and a flat undersurface
of 100 sq ft (9m2) in area. If we
increase the air pressure under the machine by 10
lb/sq ft (478 N/m2), the total reaction
pushing upward from the undersurface of the machine
will be 10 x 100 = 1 000 lb (454 kg). This, being
equal to the weight of the machine, will cause it to
leave the ground.