A giant motor connected to a propeller to push the hovercraft across the ground or water.
Ground reference speed is the speed of an aircraft with reference to the ground. Ground reference can also be used in watercraft by using the seabed. Watercraft can also use water reference speed, which is water flowing past the hull. The difference is that one uses the ground and the other uses the water to reference speed.
a hovercraft can go upto 60 mph
A hovercraft floats on a cushion of air created by a fan or propeller underneath the craft. This cushion of air reduces friction between the hovercraft and the ground, allowing it to glide smoothly over surfaces such as water, ice, or land. The pressure from the cushion of air supports the weight of the hovercraft, enabling it to "float" above the surface.
No, a hovercraft is not an airplane. a hovercraft is a craft capable of moving over water or land on a cushion of air created by jet engines.
A "maglev" or "magnetic levitation" train is suspended over the magnetically polarized rail. A hovercraft is more like a low-flying helicopter, using fans to blow air down underneath the vehicle. A hovercraft is sometimes known as a "ground effect vehicle", because it compresses air between the ground and the hovercraft. Hovercraft do not require tracks, and are equally able to "fly" over land and water.
That would be a hovercraft. However, hovercraft are not really boats and can travel on both land and water.
A Hovercraft
They answer is a hovercraft.
The main forces acting on a hovercraft are lift, propulsion, and drag. Lift is generated by the cushion of air under the hovercraft, propulsion is produced by the engines to move the hovercraft forward, and drag is the resistance encountered as the hovercraft moves through the air or water.
Hovercraft.
A Hovercraft.