Dictionary Definition
hydrofoil
Noun
1 a device consisting of a flat or curved piece
(as a metal plate) so that its surface reacts to the water it is
passing through; "the fins of a fish act as hydrofoils" [syn:
foil]
2 a speedboat that is equipped with hydrofoils
that lift it so that it skims the water at high speeds; "the museum
houses a replica of the jet hydroplane that broke the record" [syn:
hydroplane]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
Translations
wing
- Dutch: draagvleugel
- Finnish: kantosiipi
- French: plan porteur
- German: Tragflügel
vessel
- Dutch: draagvleugelboot
- Finnish: kantosiipialus
- French: hydroptère
- German: Tragflügelboot
- Italian: aliscafo
- Japanese: 水中翼船 (すいちゅうよくせん, suichūyokusen)
- Swedish: bärplansbåt
Extensive Definition
A hydrofoil is a boat with wing-like foils mounted on struts below
the hull. As the
craft increases its speed the hydrofoils develop enough lift for the
boat to become foilborne - i.e. to raise the hull up and out of the
water. This results in a great reduction in drag and a
corresponding increase in speed.
Early hydrofoils used U-shape foils. Hydrofoils
of this type are known as surface-piercing since portions of the
U-shape hydrofoils will rise above the water surface when
foilborne. Modern hydrofoils use T-shape foils which are fully
submerged. Fully submerged hydrofoils are less subject to the
effects of wave action, and are therefore more stable at sea and
are more comfortable for the crew and passengers. This type of
configuration, however, is not self-stabilizing. The angle of
attack on the hydrofoils needs to be adjusted continuously in
accordance to the changing conditions, a control process that is
performed by computers. Failure to make the proper adjustments will
result in the foilborne hull dropping violently back into the
sea.
The term "hydrofoil" is also used to refer to the
foil itself, especially when the airfoil profile has been
specifically designed for use in water (such as for a propeller blade). Hydrofoils
are now being applied in multiple marine applications. Surfers have
surfboards with hydrofoils, better suited for big waves further out
to sea.
Since air and water are basically the same at the
fluid level, albeit with different levels of viscosity, the
hydrofoil and airfoil
create lift in identical ways (see Foil
(fluid mechanics)). The foil is shaped to move smoothly through
the water while displacing some water downwards, creating an
upwards force on the foil. This upward force lifts the body of the
vessel, decreasing drag and increasing speed. The lifting force
eventually balances with the weight of the craft, reaching a point
where the hydrofoil no longer lifts out of the water, but remains
in equilibrium. Since the force of the waves acts over a smaller
area of the hydrofoil, there is a marked decrease in turbulence
drag.
History
A March 1906 Scientific
American article by American hydrofoil pioneer William E.
Meacham explained the basic principle of hydrofoils. Alexander
Graham Bell considered the invention of the hydroplane a very
significant achievement. After reading this article Bell began to
sketch concepts of what is now called a hydrofoil boat. With
Casey
Baldwin, he began hydrofoil experimentation in the summer of
1908. Baldwin studied the work of the Italian inventor Enrico
Forlanini and began testing models based on his designs. This
led him and Bell to the development of hydrofoil watercraft. During
Bell's world tour of 1910-1911 he and Baldwin met with Forlanini in
Italy. They had rides in the Forlanini hydrofoil boat over Lake
Maggiore. Baldwin described it as being as smooth as flying. On
returning to Baddeck
a number of designs were tried culminating in the HD-4. Using
Renault
engines a top speed of 87 km/h (54 mph) was achieved, accelerating
rapidly, taking wave without difficulty, steering well and showing
good stabilitof models with a stepped hull and single bow foil. In
1909 his company built a full scale long boat, Miranda III, driven
by engine that rode on a bowfoil and flat stern. The subsequent
Miranda IV was credited with . http://www.hovercraft-museum.org/musthorn1.html.
Baron von Schertel worked on hydrofoils prior to
and during World War
II in Germany. After the
war Schertel's team was captured by the Russians. Schertel himself
went to Switzerland,
where he established the Supramar company. In 1952, Supramar
launched the first commercial hydrofoil, PT10, in Lake Maggiore,
between Switzerland and Italy. The PT10 is of
surface-piercing type, it can carry 32 passengers and travel at .
In 1968, the financier Hussain Najadi acquired the Supramar AG and
expanded its operations into Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, UK,
Norway and USA. General
Dynamics of the United States became its licensee, and the
Pentagon awarded its first R&D naval research project in the
field of supercavitation.
Hitachi
Shipbuilding of Osaka, Japan, was another licensee of Supramar, as
well as many leading ship owners and shipyards in the OECD
countries.
From 1952 to 1971, Supramar designed many models
of hydrofoils: PT20, PT50, PT75, PT100 and PT150. Except the PT150,
all are of surface-piercing type. Over 200 of Supramar's design
were built, most of them by Rodriquez in Italy.
In 1961, SRI
International issued a study on "The Economic Feasibility of
Passenger Hydrofoil Craft in U.S. Domestic and Foreign
Commerce."http://ntlsearch.bts.gov/tris/record/tris/00026416.html
Commercial use of hydrofoils in the U.S. first appeared in 1961
when two commuter vessels were commissioned by North American
Hydrofoils to service the route from Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey
to the financial district of Lower Manhattan.http://www.foils.org/gallery/enterpr.htm
The
Canadian Navy built and tested a high-speed anti-submarine
hydrofoil, the
HMCS Bras d'Or, in the late 1960s, but the program was
cancelled due to a shift away from ASW by the Canadian
Navy. The Bras d'Or was a surface-piercing type which performed
well during her trials, reaching a maximum speed of .
The Soviet Union
experimented extensively with hydrofoils, constructing hydrofoil
river boats and ferries
with streamlined designs, especially during the 1970s and 1980s.
Such vessels include the Raketa
(1957) type, followed by the larger Meteor
type and the smaller Voskhod
type. One of the most successful Soviet designer/inventor in this
area was Rostislav
Alexeyev who is considered as father of modern hydrofoil based
on his design in 1950's which was world first high-speed
hydrofoils. Later, circa 1970's, Rostislav Alexeyev also went
further to create world first Ekranoplan.
The U.S.
Navy operated combat hydrofoils, such as the Pegasus
class, from 1977 through 1993. These hydrofoils were fast and
well armed, and were capable of sinking all but the largest surface
vessels. In their narcotics interdiction role,
they were a nightmare for drug
runners, being very fast, and having missiles and guns to stop
anything they could not catch, as well as the ability to call in
air support.
The Italian
Navy has used 6 hydrofoils of the Nibbio class
from the late 1970s. These were armed with a 76 mm gun, two
missiles and were capable of speed up to .
The French experimental sail powered hydrofoil Hydroptère
is the result of a research project that involves advanced
engineering skills and technologies. In January 2007, the
Hydroptère has reached a top speed of 47.2 knots.
Sydney Ferries operated a hydrofoil service between Cirular
Quay and Manly. From 1967 to 1991, a regular rapid hydrofoil
service was offered alongside the larger, slower ferries. These
were manufactured by Rodriquez Cantieri Navali http://www.rodriquez.it/fastferry/hydrofoils.php
and types in use ranged from the PT20 to RHS160F http://www.ferriesofsydney.com/ferries5.html
The SeaWorld San Diego
(California) Adventure Park began hydrofoil operations soon after
the park opened. Visitors could take a 10-minute, round trip into
Mission Bay aboard a small fleet of surface-piercing
hydrofoils. This popular attraction was halted in the mid-1980s,
due to concerns about increasing personal
watercraft traffic in the Bay.
A new kayak design, called Flyak, has hydrofoils
that lift the kayak enough to significantly reduce drag, allowing
speeds of up to 27 km/h.
Current operation
Some operators of hydrofoil include:- TurboJET service, which speeds passengers across the Pearl River Delta between Hong Kong and Macau in less than an hour, with an average speed of 45 knots (83km/h), mainly using Boeing's Jetfoil. Also services Shenzhen, Guangzhou and Kowloon. Operated by Shun Tak-China Travel Ship Management Limited.
- Cometa service between Vladivostok and Slavyanka.
- Meteor service between Saint Petersburg, Russia and the Peterhof, a summer palace of Russian tsars.
- Meteor service between Saint Petersburg, Russia and the Kronstadt, a strongly fortified Russian seaport town, located on Kotlin Island, near the head of the Gulf of Finland. It lies thirty kilometers west of Saint Petersburg.
- Meteor, Raketa and Voskhod hydrofoil types operate all over Volga, Don and Kama Rivers in Russia.
- Meteor hydrofoils are operated by a number of tour operators in Croatia, mostly for packaged tours, but there are also some scheduled services to islands in Adriatic.
- Linda Line between Tallinn and Helsinki, using two Morye's Olympias, Ukrainian built and Mercedes-Benz powered hydrofoils.
- Hydrofoils are regularly operated on the three major Italian Lakes by branches of Ministry Of Transportation: Navigazione Lago Maggiore services routes on the Lake Maggiore between Locarno and Arona, Navigazione Lago di Como services routes on the Lake Como and Navigazione Lago di Garda services routes on the Lake Garda. Three units of the Rodriquez RHS150 type operate on each lake, for a total of nine hydrofoils. Navigazione Lago di Como still operates the last Rodriquez RHS70 in active service in Italy.
- Former Russian hydrofoils are used in southern Italy for connection with islands of Lazio and Campania. SNAV has 5 RHS200, RHS160 and RHS150 used in the connections between Naples and the islands of Capri and Ischia.
- Regular hydrofoil service from Istanbul to Yalova.
- Fast Flying Ferries operated by Connexxion, provides a regular public transport service over the North Sea Canal between Amsterdam Central Station and Velsen-Zuid in The Netherlands, using Voskhod 2M hydrofoils.
- Hellenic Seaways operate their Flying Dolphins service over many routes in the Aegean, between the Cycladic islands, Saronic Gulf islands such as Aegina and Poros and Athens.
- Meteor (2), Polesye (4) and Voskhod (3) hydrofoil types operate in Hungary. MAHART PassNave Ltd. operates scheduled hydrofoil liners between Budapest, Bratislava and Vienna, inland liners between Budapest and the Danube Bend, and theme cruises to Komárom, Solt, Kalocsa and Mohács.
- Russian hydrofoils of the Kometa type operated on the Bulgarian Black Sea Coast connecting Varna, Nesebar, Burgas, Sozopol, Primorsko, and Tsarevo, and Raketa and Meteor models served the Bulgarian Danube ports between Rousse and Vidin. Both services were discontinued in the 1990s but may be reopened.
- Vietnamese Greenline Company operates hourly shuttle service between Ho Chi Minh city, Vung Tau and Con Dao island. Hydrofoil lines using the Russian-built Meteor type also connect Hai Phong, Ha Long and Mong Cai in North Vietnam, Phan Thiet and Phu Quy island and between Rach Gia and Phu Quoc island in the South.
- The service between Busan, South Korea and Fukuoka, Japan is operated by the two companies. Japanese JR Kyūshū Jet Ferry operates Beetle five times a day. Korean Miraejet operates Kobee three to four times a day. All of their fleets are Boeing 929.
- As of February 2008, all of the commercial lines in Japan use
Boeing
929. The routes include:
- Sado Kisen operates the route between Sado and Niigata.
- Tōkai Kisen operates Seven Island, running between Tokyo and Izu Islands, via Tateyama or Yokosuka. The destinations include Izu Ōshima, Toshima, Niijima, Shikinejima, and Kōzushima. The same ship also liks Atami and Izu Ōshima.
- Kyūshū Yūsen operates the route between Fukuoka, Iki, and the two ports of Tsushima.
- Kyūshū Shōsen operates the route between Nagasaki and the two of Gotō Islands, namely Fukuejima and Nakadōrijima.
- Kagoshima Shōsen and Cosmo Line operate the various routes between Kagoshima and Tanegashima or Yakushima.
Gallery
image:MeteorHydrofoil.jpg|In Russia, a Meteor
floats in displacement mode near Peterhof preparing
to travel through the Gulf of
Finland to the Winter
Palace in Saint
Petersburg. image:Schnellschiff_WSS-12.jpg|WSS-12 from
Friedrich H. Wendel image:YangtzeMeteor.jpg|A Meteor in China on
the Yangtze
River, running downstream fast on its hydrofoils.
See also
- Boeing hydrofoils
- Riverboat
- Hydroplaning
- Sailing hydrofoil
- Sit-down hydrofoil
- Flyak: hydrofoil kayak
- Hysucat
External links
- Boeing's Jetfoil
- Linda Line - Helsinki to Tallinn line
- Turbojet - Hong Kong to Macau Ferry
- Human-Powered-Hydrofoils.com
- Hydroptère Experimental sail powered hydrofoil
- The International Hydrofoil Society
- Classic Fast Ferries Magazine
- Kawasaki Jetfoil
- Rodriquez Cantieri Navali
- Directory of Soviet-made hydrofoils
- Feodosia shipbuilding company Morye
- Volga Shipyard
- Marine Technology Development Ltd. Saint Petersburg subsidiary
- MAHART PassNave Ldt - Hungary
- AquaSkipper
hydrofoil in Czech: Křídlový člun
hydrofoil in German: Tragflügelboot
hydrofoil in Modern Greek (1453-):
Υδροπτέρυγο
hydrofoil in Spanish: Hidroala
hydrofoil in Persian: قایق بالهدار
hydrofoil in French: Hydroptère
hydrofoil in Indonesian: Hidrofoil
hydrofoil in Italian: Aliscafo
hydrofoil in Dutch: Draagvleugelboot
hydrofoil in Japanese: 水中翼船
hydrofoil in Norwegian: Hydrofoil
hydrofoil in Polish: Wodolot
hydrofoil in Russian: Судно на подводных
крыльях
hydrofoil in Swedish: Bärplansbåt
hydrofoil in Turkish: Deniz otobüsü
hydrofoil in Chinese: 水翼船