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hydroplane

 
Dictionary: hy·dro·plane   ('drə-plān') pronunciation
 
n.
  1. See seaplane.
  2. A motorboat designed so that the prow and much of the hull lift out of the water and skim the surface at high speeds.
  3. See hydrofoil (sense 2).
  4. A horizontal rudder on a submarine.
intr.v., -planed, -plan·ing, -planes.
  1. To drive or ride in a hydroplane.
    1. To skim along on the surface of the water.
    2. To be or go out of control by skimming along the surface of a wet road. Used of a motor vehicle.

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US Military Dictionary: hydroplane
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n. 1. a light, fast motorboat designed to skim over the surface of water.

2. a finlike attachment that enables a moving submarine to rise or fall in the water.

3. a seaplane.

v.

(of a boat) skim over the surface of water with its hull lifted.

See the Introduction, Abbreviations and Pronunciation for further details.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: hydroplane
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hydroplane, small, high-powered racing boat designed to skim along the surface of the water. Its hull is so shaped that at high speeds the bow is tilted up out of the water, reducing the effect of frictional drag. Hydroplanes are commonly powered by outboard motors.


 
Word Tutor: hydroplane
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pronunciation

IN BRIEF: A small motorboat that skims along on the back of its hull at high speeds. Also: A seaplane.

pronunciation They used a hydroplane to skim over the waters of the swamp.

 
Wikipedia: Hydroplane
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Ellstrom Elam Plus, at the 2006 Madison Regatta.
Miss Madison unlimited hydroplane in 2007, with extended air scoop.

A hydroplane (from the Greek ὑδροπλάνον /iðro΄planon/) (or hydro, or thunderboat) is a type of motorboat used exclusively for racing.

A key aspect of Hydroplanes is that they only use the water they're on for propulsion and steering (not for flotation)—when going at full speed they are primarily held aloft by a principle of fluid dynamics known as "planing", with only a tiny fraction of their hull actually touching the water.

Contents

Racing circuit

The American Boat Racing Association (ABRA) is the primary unlimited hydroplane boat racing league.

The ABRA season typically runs from late June through September, consisting of six races and 13 to 15 teams. Race sites include Evansville, Madison, Detroit, Tri-Cities, Seattle, and San Diego.

Hydroplane design

The basic hull design of most hydroplanes has remained relatively unchanged since the 1950s: two sponsons in front, one on either side of the bow; behind the wide bow, is a narrower, mostly rectangular section housing the driver, engine, and steering equipment. The aft part of the vessel is supported in the water by the lower half of the propeller, which is designed to operate semi-submerged at all times. The goal is to keep as little of the boat in contact with the water as possible, as water is much denser than air, and so exerts more drag on the vehicle than air does. Essentially the boat 'flies' over the surface of the water rather than actually traveling through it.

One of the few significant attempts at a radically different design since the three-point propriding design was introduced was referred to as Canard. It reversed the width properties, having a very narrow bow that only touched the water in one place, and two small outrigger sponsons in the back.

Early hydroplanes had mostly straight lines and flat surfaces aside from the uniformly curved bow and sponsons. The curved bow was eventually replaced by what is known as a pickle fork bow, where a space is left between the front few feet of the sponsons. Also, the centered single, vertical tail (similar to the ones on most modern airplanes) was gradually replaced by a horizontal stabilizer supported by vertical tails on either side of the boat and as of 2006 the horizontal stabilizer was mostly abandoned. Later, as fine-tuning the aerodynamics became more important, the bottoms of the main hull have subtle curves to give the best lift.

Unlimited hydroplane engines

The aviation industry has been the main source of engines for the boats. For the first few decades after World War II, they used surplus World War II-era internal-combustion airplane engines, typically Rolls-Royce Merlins or Griffons, or Allison V-1710s, all liquid-cooled V-12s. The loud roar of these engines earned hydroplanes the nickname thunderboats or dinoboats.

Donald Campbell attempted world speed records in the jet engined hydroplane, Bluebird in the early 1950s. The Ted Jones-designed Slo-Mo-Shun IV three-point, Allison-powered hydroplane set the water speed record (160.323 mph) in Lake Washington, off Seattle, Washington's Sand Point, on June 26, 1950, breaking the previous (ten-plus-year-old) record (141.740 mph/228.1 km/h) by almost 20 mph (32 km/h).

Starting in 1980, they have increasingly used Vietnam War-era turboshaft engines from helicopters (in 1973–1974, one hydroplane, U-95, used turbine engines in races to test the technology). The most commonly used turbine is the Lycoming T55, used in the CH-47 Chinook.

Efforts have occasionally been made to use automotive engines, but they generally have not proven competitive.

The "limited" classes of inboard hydroplane racing are organized under the name Inboard Powerboat Circuit. These classes utilize automotive power, as well as two-stroke power. There are races throughout the country from April to October. Many Unlimited drivers got their start in the "limited" classes.

Until November 20, 1977, every official water speed record had been set by an American or Briton. That day Australian Ken Warby broke the Anglo-American domination when he piloted his Spirit of Australia to 464.5 km/h (290.313 mph) to beat Lee Taylor’s record. Warby, who had built the craft in his back yard, used the publicity to find sponsorship to pay for improvements to the Spirit. On October 8, 1978 Warby travelled to Blowering Dam, Australia, and broke both the 480 km/h (300 mph) and 500 km/h barriers with an average speed of 510 km/h (318.75 mph).

As of 2005, Warby’s record still stands, and there have only been two official attempts to break it[1].

Notes

External links


 
Translations: Hydroplane
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Dansk (Danish)
n. - vandflyver, hydroplan
v. intr. - flyve med vandflyver, flyve i vandflyver

Nederlands (Dutch)
watervliegtuig, glijboot, soort vin aan onderzeeër, over het water heen scheren, slippen op nat wegdek

Français (French)
n. - hydroglisseur, barre de plongée, (US) hydravion
v. intr. - voyager en hydroglisseur/en hydravion

Deutsch (German)
n. - Tiefenruder, Gleitfläche, Gleitboot
v. - übers Wasser gleiten

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - υδροπλάνο
v. - πετώ με υδροπλάνο

Italiano (Italian)
idrovolante, idroplano

Português (Portuguese)
n. - hidroplano (m) (Aer.)
v. - deslizar sobre a água

Русский (Russian)
глиссер с воздушным винтом

Español (Spanish)
n. - hidroavión, lancha rápida, hidroplano
v. intr. - viajar en hidroplano

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - planande racerbåt, horisontalroder (för djupreglering av ubåt), hydroplan
v. - vattenplana

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
水上飞机, 水上滑艇, 乘坐水上滑艇, 水上滑行, 掠过水面, 湿路打滑, 液面滑行

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 水上飛機, 水上滑艇
v. intr. - 乘坐水上滑艇, 水上滑行, 掠過水面, 濕路打滑, 液面滑行

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 수상비행기, 수상 활주정, 수평타
v. intr. - 물위를 달리다, 수상비행기를 타다

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 水中翼船, ハイドロプレン, 水上飛行機
v. - 水上を滑走する, 水中翼船に乗る

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) الزلاقه المائيه, زورق بخاري سريع, ساعد الغوص دفه على محور أفقي من الغواصه لتوجيهها إلى أعلى أو أدنى, الطائرة المائيه (فعل) ينزلق الزورق فوق الماء وقد انفصل جزء من بدنه عن السطح, يقود أو يركب طائرة مائيه‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮סירת-מנוע מהירה, מטוס-ים, מתקן המחובר לצוללת ומאפשר לה לשקוע או לנסוק במים‬
v. intr. - ‮ריחפה על פני המים (רחפת)‬


 
 

 

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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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