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DIY Ultra-Simple Hovercraft Print E-mail
Written by William Beaty   
Tuesday, 19 April 2005
Have you ever wanted your very own hovercraft?  Here are step-by-step instructions for creating a DIY Ultra-Simple Hovercraft.  It uses parts you probably already have laying around the house.

This article is part of Science Hobbyist, http://amasci.com/amateur/hovercft.html. Check out Mr. Beaty's other projects at http://scienceclub.org/kidproj1.html
 

ULTRA-SIMPLE HOVERCRAFT
can lift several adults!
2003 sonny prince

[diagram of layers: nut,washer, wood
plate, plastic sheet, small disk, washer, bolt]

NEEDED:

  • PLYWOOD, 3ft or 4ft square, 3/8in or 1/2in thick
    (or buy a 48in precut round tabletop).
  • PLASTIC SHEET, 1ft larger than the above wood
    (Avoid using 1mil thickness garbage bags, instead use a heavy 10mil plastic dropcloth from a paint store, 'Visqueen' sheet, or an old plastic shower curtain)
  • LEAF BLOWER (battery powered, gasoline), or use the old-style 'ShopVac' cannister vacuum cleaner which has a blower outlet
  • SMALL PLASTIC DISK, coffee can lid, or 6" disk 1/8in thick plastic
  • BOLT, 2in, 1/4-20
  • NUT, 1/4-20
  • FENDER WASHERS (TWO)
  • SMOOTH FLOOR (linoleum, ball court, or smooth concrete)
  • electric saber saw, drill, razor knife, staplegun, duct tape
  • Optional: lawn chair and clamps/screws to hold it down.
  • Optional: some sort of rubber bumper for the edge. Nail on some old bike tires? Just cover it with duct tape?

 

INSTRUCTIONS:

Step 1:

MAKE THE WOOD DISK
Cut out your plywood disk. You can leave it square, or experiment with other shapes instead of round, but the sharp corners can hurt people. Round is best for safety.

Drill a 5/16in hole in the exact center, and make sure that the 2in bolt easily passes through it.

NOTE: people tell me that you can avoid using a big bolt. Instead, fasten down the small plastic disk with several short wood screws. This is a big improvement! Kids sitting on the hovercraft won't get poked in the butt anymore by that big bolt sticking up.

Step 2:

Make a hole in the plywood which exactly fits the end of your leaf blower or shopvac hose. This hole must be placed half way between the center of the disk and the edge, as shown below. It's a good idea to trace the hole in pencil on the wood (place the mouth of the leaf blower on the wood and trace around it.) It DOES NOT have to fit perfectly. Later you can seal any leaks with duct tape. Or just let it leak. The hose should be flush with the bottom surface (don't let it stick out or the floor will block the air flow.)

[]


Step 3:

MAKE THE PLASTIC SHEET
Next, lay your plywood disk on the center of your large plastic sheet. Fold the edges of the sheet up over the plywood, then use the staplegun to staple it to the top of the plywood disk. Put a staple about every 4 inches. The plastic should be tight against the wood, but don't pull it TOO tight or the plastic will tear loose when inflated. When finished, you can cut off the excess plastic. If you wish, used duct tape to tape the edge of the plastic down to make it look nice. From above, it should look like this:

[]



Step 4:

ADD THE "SKIRT LIFTER"
Poke a hole in the center of the coffee can lid. Attach it to the bottom of the hovercraft as shown below. It goes over the plastic sheet. It pins the plastic sheet firmly against the plywood. (The coffee can lid forms the "donut hole" when the leaf blower slightly inflates the plastic into a "donut" shape.)

[]



Step 5:

CUT THE CENTER HOLES
Use your razor knife to cut six vent holes in the plastic as shown below. They should be about 2in diameter. They must be placed within a few inches of the coffee can lid. Space them out so that there is plenty of plastic between each of them. But if they are too far away from the center, they will become plugged when the plastic sheet lays flat against the floor. If the plastic between the holes is too narrow, it will tear. If you wish, reinforce the thin necks of plastic between the holes using a couple of layers of duct tape.

[]

 

DONE!
Flip your hovercraft over so the plastic sheet is on the bottom. Place it on a smooth floor. Stick the leaf blower into the hole and turn it on. The plastic on the bottom should inflate. If it does not, lift the plywood up a bit to let the air get in and inflate the "skirt." The hovercraft will lift up slightly and start gliding around.

This hovercraft can support many hundreds of pounds. It works best on very smooth surfaces (linoleum, or school gym floor.)

PS
if you want to experiment, maybe you could try four or five blow-dryers with their heat turned off. I know that a single blow-dryer doesn't supply enough wind, but several blow-dryers might do the job. Also, think of ways to drive your hovercraft forwards. Maybe a big fan would work. (I KNOW that a couple of CO2 fire extinquishers work well as rocket propulsion, but they're too dangerous for kids to use.

[]
 

Lift it up at the start, otherwise the bag might not inflate.

Last Updated ( Thursday, 19 May 2005 )
 
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