Neoteric Hovercraft pilot training instructors Chris Fitzgerald
and Steve Stafford recently traveled to Hong Kong to conduct six days of challenging hovercraft
pilot training for firefighters from the Hong Kong Fire Services Department in
their new 6-passenger rescue Hovertrek.
Aerial view of the Ng Tung River near Tin Ping Shan, where flight training was conducted. |
Hands-on flight training for the firefighters took place in one
of these drainage channels of the Ng Tung River near Tin Ping Shan.
At the start of hands-on flight training, Stafford and Fitzgerald show the second group of student pilots how to remove the hovercraft from its trailer and to conduct a pre-flight inspection. |
A major
challenge was that the channel, at 40 yards wide, offered insufficient width to
perform many of the standard pilot training maneuvers. In addition, the 4-feet
deep channel, with its 45-degree concrete walls and stairways every 200 yards
with stainless steel chain railings, provided a forbidding number of opportunities
for hovercraft impacts.
In the narrow channel, Fitzgerald instructs firefighter Lai Wa in slow speed maneuvering and backing up.
|
Hong Kong is tremendously efficient and its government
demands the highest standards for all purchases. Before their
new hovercraft could be shipped, officials from the Government of Hong Kong,
the Hong Kong Fire Department, and China Pacific Marine, Ltd. (Neoteric's Hong Kong agent) visited Neoteric in Indiana USA
to conduct stringent performance evaluations on the craft.
Hong Kong is the ideal environment for the unique capabilities of the hovercraft. Rivers, canals, channels, drainage ditches, estuaries and fish farms proliferate and there is an enormous number of islands and beaches, as well as vast barge and ship traffic.
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