

As you can see in each of our car designs, our imaginations are equally matched by our ability to fabricate and build these attention grabbing kustoms. Special conditions and guarantee limitations apply. Welcome to the unique and one-of-a-kind creations of George Barris. Thousands of new, high-quality pictures added every day. The craft's fiberglass composite and urethane foam composite hull meets United States Coast Guard standards for reliable hovering over water. Find hover cars stock images in HD and millions of other royalty-free stock photos, illustrations and vectors in the Shutterstock collection.

Its low-profile, aerodynamic design minimizes air drag to maximize stability in crosswinds while its innovative skirt system employs individually handmade segments to provide optimal anti-plow and -scoop performance. Motorcycle-style handlebars steer the craft, controlling its patented fly-by-wire reverse thrust system, which provides braking and backwards hovering up to 25 mph - the only hovercraft in the world to do so. A hover car is a personal vehicle that flies at a constant altitude of up to few meters above the ground and used for personal transportation in the same way a modern automobile is employed. The fan's streamlined design minimizes noise, speeds up an 18-hole outing, and conveys four passengers beneath a lift-up roof and two golf bags in an open rear compartment. Powered by a 65-hp twin-cylinder Hirth engine, its nine-blade axial-flow ducted fan propels the craft up to 45 mph and 9" off the ground without harming grass, allowing immediate crossing of a pond or stream to follow-up a cross-water shot. This is the golf cart that glides over sand traps and water hazards on a cushion of air as easily as it does over fairways and the rough. Hover Car Floating Above the Ground Clipart Illustration by Leo Blanchette 12007 Hover Car Floating Above the Ground Clipart Illustration by Leo Blanchette Image © 2022 Leo Blanchette Royalty-free futuristic clipart picture of a hovercar floating above the ground.
