hydrofoil over
Lake Maggiore, 1906
Prototypes The first evidence of a hydrofoil on a vessel appears on a British patent granted in 1869 to Emmanuel Denis Farcot, a Parisian. He claimed that "adapting to the sides and bottom of the vessel a series or inclined planes or wedge formed pieces, which as the vessel is driven forward will have the effect of lifting it in the water and reducing the draught.". Italian inventor
Enrico Forlanini began work on hydrofoils in 1898 and used a "ladder" foil system. Forlanini obtained patents in Britain and the United States for his ideas and designs. Between 1899 and 1901, British boat designer
John Thornycroft worked on a series of models with a stepped hull and single bow foil. In 1909 his company built the full scale long boat,
Miranda III. Driven by a engine, it rode on a bowfoil and flat stern. The subsequent
Miranda IV was credited with a speed of . 's
HD-4 on a test run, c. 1919 In May 1904 a hydrofoil boat was described being tested on the
River Seine "in the neighbourhood of
Paris". This boat was designed by
Comte de Lambert. This had 5 variable pitch fins on the hull beneath the water so inclined that when the boat begins to move "the boat rises and the planes come to the surface" with the result that "it skims over the surface with little but the propellers beneath the surface". The boat had twin hulls 18-foot long connected by a single deck 9-foot wide, and was fitted with a 14HP
De Dion-Bouton motor, the boat was reported to have reached 20 mph. It was stated that "The boat running practically on its fins resembles an aeroplane". A March 1906
Scientific American article by American hydrofoil pioneer William E. Meacham explained the basic principle of hydrofoils.
Alexander Graham Bell considered the invention of the
hydroplane (now regarded as a distinct type, but also employing lift) a very significant achievement, and after reading the article began to sketch concepts of what is now called a hydrofoil boat. With his chief engineer
Casey Baldwin, Bell began hydrofoil experiments in the summer of 1908. Baldwin studied the work of the Italian inventor
Enrico Forlanini and began testing models based on those designs, which led to the development of hydrofoil watercraft. During Bell's world tour of 1910–1911, Bell and Baldwin met with Forlanini in Italy, where they rode in his hydrofoil boat over
Lake Maggiore. Baldwin described it as being as smooth as flying. On returning to Bell's large laboratory at his
Beinn Bhreagh estate near
Baddeck, Nova Scotia, they experimented with a number of designs, culminating in Bell's
HD-4. Using
Renault engines, a top speed of was achieved, accelerating rapidly, taking waves without difficulty, steering well and showing good stability. Bell's report to the
United States Navy permitted him to obtain two engines. On 9 September 1919 the
HD-4 set a world marine speed record of , which stood for two decades. A full-scale replica of the
HD-4 is viewable at the
Alexander Graham Bell National Historic Site museum in Baddeck, Nova Scotia. In the early 1950s an English couple built the
White Hawk, a jet-powered hydrofoil water craft, in an attempt to beat the absolute water speed record. However, in tests,
White Hawk could barely top the record breaking speed of the 1919
HD-4. The designers had faced an engineering phenomenon that limits the top speed of even modern hydrofoils:
cavitation disturbs the lift created by the foils as they move through the water at speed above , bending the lifting foil.
First passenger boats German engineer Hanns von Schertel worked on hydrofoils prior to and during
World War II in
Germany. After the war, the Russians captured Schertel's team. As Germany was not authorized to build fast boats, Schertel went to
Switzerland, where he established Together with his business partner and chief designer Karl Johann Büller the Supramar company. In 1952, Supramar launched the first commercial hydrofoil, PT10 "Freccia d'Oro" (Golden Arrow), in Lake Maggiore, between Switzerland and
Italy. The PT10 is of surface-piercing type, it can carry 32 passengers and travel at . In 1968, the Bahraini born banker
Hussain Najadi acquired the Supramar AG and expanded its operations into Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, the UK, Norway and the US.
General Dynamics of the United States became its licensee, and the Pentagon awarded its first R&D naval research project in the field of
supercavitation.
Hitachi Shipbuilding of Osaka, Japan, was another licensee of Supramar, as well as many leading ship owners and shipyards in the OECD countries. From 1952 to 1971, Supramar designed many models of hydrofoils: PT20, PT50, PT75, PT100 and PT150. All are of surface-piercing type, except the PT150 combining a surface-piercing foil forward with a fully submerged foil in the aft location. Over 200 of Supramar's design were built, most of them by Rodriquez (headed at the time by Engineer Carlo Rodriquez in
Sicily, Italy. During the same period the
Soviet Union experimented extensively with hydrofoils, constructing hydrofoil river boats and
ferries with streamlined designs during the cold war period and into the 1980s. Such vessels include the
Raketa (1957) type, followed by the larger
Meteor type and the smaller
Voskhod type. One of the most successful Soviet designer/inventor in this area was
Rostislav Alexeyev, who some consider the 'father' of the modern hydrofoil due to his 1950s era high speed hydrofoil designs. Later, circa 1970s, Alexeyev combined his hydrofoil experience with the
surface effect principle to create the
Ekranoplan. Extensive investment in this type of technology in the USSR resulted in the largest civil hydrofoil fleet in the world and the making of the Meteor type, the most successful hydrofoil in history, with more than 400 units built. Peterhof hydrofoil (18272163540).jpg|
Voskhod Meteor boat on Neva Bay.jpg|
Meteor Raketa-185 on Khimki Reservoir 6-jun-2014 02.jpg|
Raketa Polesye-1 (ship, 1986, Gomel, 7).jpg|
Polesye Kizhi 06-2017 img30 Kometa-17 hydrofoil.jpg|
Kometa In 1961,
SRI International issued a study on "The Economic Feasibility of Passenger Hydrofoil Craft in US Domestic and Foreign Commerce". Commercial use of hydrofoils in the US first appeared in 1961 when two commuter vessels were commissioned by
Harry Gale Nye, Jr.'s North American Hydrofoils to service the route from Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey to the financial district of Lower Manhattan. ==Military usage==