

Air-Cushion Military Vehicles (ACVs / Hovercraft)
Definition (clean, enforceable)
Vehicles that:
- Use a pressurized air cushion for lift
- Operate within ground effect (surface-bound)
- Provide amphibious mobility across water → shore → soft terrain
Not aircraft. Not free-hovering. Surface-coupled.
Functional Role
| Role | Description |
|---|---|
| Amphibious Assault | Ship-to-shore transport of troops, tanks, logistics |
| Littoral Mobility | Rapid movement across shallow water, mud, marsh |
| Logistics | Heavy payload delivery where ports are unavailable |
| Patrol / Security | Coastal and riverine operations (smaller craft) |
Primary Military Producers (Real Programs)
Tier 1 — Heavy Assault Capability
- United States
- LCAC / SSC (Ship-to-Shore Connector)
- Core doctrine: carrier/amphib group projection
- Russia
- Zubr-class
- Heaviest payload globally
- Designed for rapid armored beach assault
- China
- Type 726 LCAC
- Integrated with Type 071 / 075 amphibious ships
Tier 2 — Industrial + Export Capability
- United Kingdom
- Griffon Hoverwork
- Focus: patrol, utility, export platforms
Tier 3 — Regional / Limited Programs
- South Korea
- Japan
Primarily:
- Smaller fleets
- Defensive / regional use
- Less doctrinal emphasis on large-scale assault
Hard Constraints (why this category stays narrow)
| Constraint | Impact |
|---|---|
| Fuel Consumption | Extremely high vs tracked/wheeled |
| Payload Efficiency | Good, but not scalable beyond certain mass |
| Vulnerability | Large, loud, lightly armored |
| Sea State Sensitivity | Performance drops in rough conditions |
| No Terrain Independence | Still tied to relatively flat surfaces |