APRIL/MAY 2018 29HIGH SPEED: Foiling, Part 1
English Channel, but they chiefly
serve Asian markets.
Back on Puget Sound, Talaria IV
also runs on a canard foil systemDisplacing between 110 tons and
115 tons, they carry from 167 to 400
passengers. Some ran in the Hawaiian
and Canary Islands and crossed the e squadron of PHMs was sta-
tioned in Key West to run drug inter-
diction operations for the U.S. Coast
Guard. Despite their reliablilty and
performance, all PHMs were decom-
missioned in 1993. Five were broken
up, and one, USS Aries (PHM-5), sur-
vives as a privately owned museum
exhibit. From Jetfoil to Bayliner
All that military R&D didn’t go to
waste. Based on the canard foil con-
guration of the PHMs, the Boeing
929 Jetfoil, a passenger ferry for civil-
ian use, was debuted in 1974 by Boe-
ing’s Marine Division. ese massive
vessels proved that foiling technology
and waterjet propulsion could scale
up to a size that made commercial
sense. Nearly 50 of these Jetfoils were
commissioned for service until the
mid-1990s.Boeing’s brochure shows the sensors and control systems, based on analog computers, at the heart of the formidable PHM
vessels armed with missile launchers and a 76mm gun. Only six were built, and they ended up on drug-interdiction missions for
the U.S. Coast Guard from their base in Key West, Florida.The Jetfoil 929, a hydrofoiling passenger ferry with waterjet propulsion, was also
developed by Boeing Marine Systems. Nearly 50 units were built, and most operate
in Asian markets.BOEING MARKETING BROCHURE (BOTH)WIKIMEDIA HONG KONGFoiling172-ADFinal.indd 29 2/21/18 7:39 PM