, 15 tweets, 5 min read Read on Twitter
It has just come to my attention that in 1963 Scottish shipbuilder William Denny (of Dumbarton) built a Hoverbus! And the NLS Moving Image Archive has a 25 minute colour film about it! movingimage.nls.uk/film/6005
flickr.com/photos/sueandm… being a shipbuilder, it looks less like a hovercraft and more like Gerry Anderson's take on a pleasure barge.
That was the production D2, this is the protoype D1, which looks more like its sinking when not hovering flickr.com/photos/scottis…
flickr.com/photos/scottis… here is the D2 again, "flying" on the Gareloch
The D2 served for 2 years as a Thames launch, before being returned to her manufacturer and laid up for 6 years until 1970, when she went to Jamaica (no, she went of her own accord 🥁)
The D2 got to London by a rather roundabout route, from Dumbarton to Oban via the Crinan Canal, then to Inverness via the Caledonian Canal, Fraserburgh, Aberdeen, Berwick-Upon-Tweed and down the east coast to the Thames
When the D1 was sent to Southampton, they stuck her on a Pickfords low loader and drove her instead. I guess that's the only Hovercraft that ever went down the Glasgow Road? (at Dumbarton East Station)
The D1 and D2 were a type of hovercraft known as Surface Effect Ships (SES), they didn't have the usual inflatable rubber skirts, instead had solid sides to retain the air cushion. She had 4 diesel engines, 2 to blaw and 2 to push using conventional ships screws
This is an interesting development, as at the time the rest of the UK Hovercraft builders - who had started out as aircraft manufacturers - were trying to build bigger and faster things powered by jet engines. Denny was trying to find a more practical and economical niche.
Two D2s were built, the one that went to the Thames and a second. Both were used for a short time by Norwest, who attempted to use them from Barrow to the Isle of Man before it was realised how unsuited to the open sea they were.
Here is Gerry Anderson's Hoverbus for comparison...
The @liquid_highway1 has some excellent images, including a "SEE LONDON BY HOVERBUS" poster on this page; thameshighway.wordpress.com/2017/08/13/the…
So there you go. The Scottish hovercraft industry, 1961-1963. Built 3 hovercraft in Dumbarton, which didn't really work very well, and when the parent company was liquidated the glorious white hot future of Scottish transportation fizzled out.
You can at least visit a small but perfectly formed model of a Denny Hoverbus, at the Denny Tank exhibition in Dumbarton
Footnote. Having got towards the end of the video, a contemporary press cutting suggests the costs of the Hoverbus project may have pushed the ailing shipyard to the wall
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