Air Cushion Vehicles PDF
Air Cushion Vehicles PDF
Air Cushion Vehicles PDF
(ACV)
Final Report
Submitted to
The Faculty of Operation Catapult LXXXIV
Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology
Terre Haute, Indiana
By
Group 28
Brock McMullen
Ty Wiggins
Andrew Clayburn
Chris Palermo
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In 1953, Cockerell tested his theories of an air-cushion device using an empty KiteKat cat
food tin inside a coffee tin, an industrial air blower, and a pair of kitchen scales. His idea was to
build a vehicle that would move over the waters surface, floating on a layer of air. This would
reduce friction between the water and vehicle. To test his hypothesis, he placed the smaller can
inside the larger can and used a hairdryer to blow air into them. By 1955, he had built a working
model from balsa wood and had taken out his first patent. Although there have been many
variations (leading to the development of a typical hovercraft design, as seen below), Cockerell
developed the first practical hovercraft designs leading to the launch of the first hovercraft to
be produced commercially, the SRN1, in 1959.
1. Propellers
2. Air
3. Fan
4. Flexible skirt
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Design / Results
On the second day of Operation Catapult and the first day of Group Work, we were
introduced to the actual hovercraft project by Dr. Ferro. We were then asked to decide what our
objectives would be, and determined them, as seen above under the title Objectives. We were
then introduced to the design process, in which we were asked to identify the problem we are
facing, analyze this problem, make decisions to solve the problem, build prototypes to execute
these solutions, test the prototypes, and then document our results. This is the process we would
utilize for the remainder of Catapult and served as the basis for all our actions during Group
Work.
In the first day of group work, we identified that the problem we were facing was the task
of building a functional hovercraft capable of lifting, moving forward, changing directions, and
stopping. The next task was to analyze this problem and produce a prototype that would fix
this problem. We decided to accomplish this by creating different designs that we could use. In
discussing a mass of varying designs, another task was to consider the materials necessary in
order to build those vehicles given the objectives agreed upon by the group. Our original
materials given to us before we considered other necessities were those essential to air cushion
vehicles these being two servos, and R/C components (Fireball modified 21d Engine). Along
with these materials, we were given access to the machine shop and supply rooms.
In our first prototype, we had a very basic design, including a single engine / fan, rudders,
and bag skirt on top of a lightweight material: Styrofoam. We believed that we would start off
with a simple design and would only use more elaborate designs if they became necessary. The
Styrofoam base made creating a hovercraft easier because it needed less power in order to hover.
Another principle of this design was that some air was redirected from thrust to lift so that our
hovercraft would actually hover. When creating the vent for this initial craft, we placed two thin
foam boards as semicircles on each side of the hole to be cut and proceeded to connect a very
thin piece of sheet metal to the top of these two pieces. After this, we created a small duct
opening below this vent in order to provide air to the skirt we planned to create for this craft, a
bag skirt.
When searching for how hovercrafts actually hover, we found that they utilize a skirt, and
that there are a large amount of skirts all having their own strengths and weaknesses. The bag
skirt surrounds the craft and uses additional pressure in order to inflate the bag against air
pressure under the craft in the cushion in order to create lift. The bag is popular as its
manufacture uses the least amount of material compared to other skirt types. There is usually
little or no wastage. In the bag skirt we would use in this design, bags are usually inflated
through a splitter plate connected by a small duct placed directly under the lift fan in the fan
duct. Another design, the jupe skirt, looks like the frustum of a cone resting upside down; it
slopes approximately eight degrees and in this way, as the pressure builds, a vertical force is
produced on the jupe which will cause its inflation. There are usually three skirts in this system
directly below the lift force, and the weight distribution usually controls the direction of motion
rather than rudders. An additional design, a segmented skirt (or finger skirt), functions by
creating and attaching many bag skirts this option makes it much easier to repair compared to
the other skirts, yet requires much labor as well as its problems of poor durability and stability.
Different skirts can be used in combination and it is not uncommon for segmented skirts and jupe
skirts to be attached to the underside of bag skirts, as seen in Figure 2 below. Given our
lightweight design, however, it was suggested by Dr. Onyancha (a professor at Rose-Hulman
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who has had much previous experience when it comes to hovercrafts) that we use a solid skirt
simply made out of the foam we had used previously to make the base we thought that it was a
possibility that this skirt would work and took the advice of our teacher, a huge modification to
our original design.
Bag
Jupe
Solid
Finger /
Segmented
Cost Labor
8
8
8
6
9
9
6
6
Repairability
5
5
3
10
Weight of skirt
7
7
5
6
1 = Worst
10 = Best
Figure 3: Decision Matrix for Skirt Choice
Another change we made to our original design was a shroud so that air would not be
wasted simply going off from the sides of the blades, which would have impaired both our lift
and thrust. We fixed this problem by using two layers of foam boards that would fit perfectly
around the fan but still manage to fit on the base board of the hovercraft in order to keep air on
the inner side of the shroud, as seen in Figure 4. One alteration necessary to provide safety to the
craft for those guiding it was a shroud covering both sides of the fan with chicken wire to prevent
hands from being cut by the fast rotation of blades on our fan. However, when we tested this
prototype, it barely hovered off the ground, causing us to consider our other designs that we
came up with in the beginning of the project. The problems of this prototype were not numerous,
but enough to prevent the craft from lifting, as we knew that there was simply not enough lift
being produced in order for the thrust to become effective. After completing our testing of
Prototype 1, we knew that there were two obvious problems with our hovercraft: there was not
enough air going into the ducts that were releasing our air into the bottom of the craft and that
the solid skirt was not working.
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Once we created the functional rudders out of servos, wires, and the rudders themselves,
we attached this directional device to the craft, yet we had much trouble getting this hovercraft to
float. We soon began to spend the majority of our time testing our new skirts to work with the
rudders, going through handfuls of different skirts each day. The rudders were the best they
would ever get, and we decided to continue attempting a variety of different bag skirts and the
way they would attach to the base of the craft. After multiple designs, we finally ended up with a
functional hovercraft that accomplished all of the objectives we set out at the beginning of our
experiment, as seen in Figure 5.
Analysis / Discussion
After designing our multiple prototypes, many tests were conducted in order to determine
whether or not each prototype would be successful in fulfilling our initial objectives. When the
first hovercraft was completed (without the rudders, an essential part of the craft), we tested the
craft to see whether or not it would hover. This craft had two major flaws: there was not enough
air going into the ducts that were releasing our air into the bottom of the craft and that the solid
skirt was not working.
After making alterations to the second prototype in order to attend to these problems
created by the original craft, and being successful, we then began attaching rudders to our craft.
This was easily the most tedious and most frustrating aspect of the project, as we easily
attempted a dozen different skirt designs to function cohesively with the vehicle. In the end, our
final skirt design was different from other unsuccessful attempts due to how the holes in the
bottom of the skirt corresponded to the area of the bag skirt in total. This was a problem in many
models, as we either had too much or too little area with the bag skirt as well as too many or not
enough holes in the bottom of the craft to actually allow the lift. However, when tested in both
the land test as well as the water test, our craft performed well and satisfied all the objectives we
wished to complete from the beginning.
All in all, our group accomplished all of its objectives as defined on the first day of
Group Work. Our many failures taught us more than our few successes, as it was during these
difficulties that we actually found out what functions with a hovercraft and what doesnt. If
asked to do the project again, our group would most likely have stuck with the normal skirts
instead of trying out a solid skirt which we had never heard of the process of working on the
solid skirt which ended up not working took a couple days that would have been spent in a better
manner. The project was more fun than we could have imagined, and we would love to do it over
again. In the course of this experiment, we found out how to build a functional hovercraft with
varying components such as a skirt as well as rudders all of which are good pieces of
knowledge. Yet while we may have learned a lot about creating an actual air cushion vehicle,
this project taught us more about persistence as well as determination to reach a common goal.
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Bibliography