What is an ekranoplane and how does it fly over water?
Recent images have revealed details of a strange flying vessel that China is testing called the Bohai Sea Monster. This is an ekranoplane — a machine that is not quite an airplane and not quite a ship. It flies at a height of several meters above the water, using the so-called "screen effect": an air cushion between the wing and the surface of the water provides additional lift. Thanks to this, it can carry a large load and fly fast, using almost no fuel.
Such devices have long been of interest to the military — they are fast, elusive to radar and can deliver equipment directly to the shore.
Propellers, not jet engines — why so?
The main thing that catches your eye is that instead of jet engines, there are ordinary propellers. Against the background of hypersonic missiles and fighter jets, it looks like a step back. But in fact, it's a reasonable compromise.
Screw engines are cheaper, easier to maintain, and more economical. Supersonic sound is not necessary for a car that flies low and does not aim at the stratosphere. The main thing is reliability and the ability to work from coastal bases. In addition, propellers make less noise at low altitudes, which is useful for stealth.
Soviet ideas in Chinese execution
China was clearly inspired by the Soviet "Killer Whales" and "Harriers" — giant ekranoplanes that the USSR developed in the 60-80s. Only now have technologies stepped forward: modern materials, electronics, navigation. China can do what Moscow failed to do then — create a really combat-ready and controllable device.
If the ekranoplanes did not go into production in the Soviet Union, China can bring the matter to an end.
Why would China need such a "monster" — a military or amphibious ship-plane
There are two scenarios. The first one is amphibious. Imagine: a car starts from a base on the coast of Bohai Bay, which in a couple of hours will deliver a company of soldiers or an armored personnel carrier directly to the island without entering the port. The second is shock: armed with cruise missiles, it can attack ships in the A2AD zone while remaining under radar.
In any case, this is not just a technology demonstration. This is an attempt to gain an advantage in the Middle Sea, where every kilometer and second is crucial.
Sources
- SecurityLab — China’s new ekranoplan: features, military use and coastal strategy
- Rossiyskaya Gazeta — “Bohai Monster”: design details and amphibious potential
- Radio Azattyk — Comparison with Soviet “Caspian Monster” and expert views on military missions
- Realnoe Vremya — High-res photos, structural analysis vs. Soviet craft
- Armiya.az — “Sea Monster of Bohai”: ambitious jet-powered ekranoplan for naval use
- The War Zone via Naked Science — First full image of China’s ground-effect vehicle
- InoSMI / SCMP — China’s progress in Soviet-derived ekranoplan technology