Documentary to reveal unseen 'hover train' footage

John Devine
BBC News, Cambridgeshire
John Devine/BBC Drew Silver, 36, has short black hair, spiked on top he has a stubbly chin and a moustache and is wearing a grey fleece top with a denim shirt and red t-shirt underneath, three concrete pillars can be seen behind him of various sizes from around 4m (13ft) long 2m (6ft) high and 60cm (2ft) across they are in a meadow with a river bank behind and trees on the horizon.John Devine/BBC
Drew Silver says the vision of the hover train story was "Edinburgh to London in 90 minutes with the most environmentally friendly transport you can imagine"

A new documentary film will feature previously unseen footage of the testing of an ill-fated prototype "hover train".

Filmmaker Drew Silver, from Littleport in Cambridgeshire, said he became enthralled with the story of the "space age" RTV 31, which was trialled in the Fens in the late 1960s.

The "hover train" was a pipe dream poised to revolutionise public transport - but was abandoned when the government pulled the plug in 1973. Only a few original concrete pillars can still be seen between Sutton Gault and Earith.

"I thought it was an urban myth that parts of this train track still exist. When I found them I felt I was standing in the presence of unique history," Mr Silver said.

Railworld Wildlife Haven A space age looking hover train sits on a length of concrete track. The vehicle  is about 6m (20ft) long and is painted blue and white with a red and yellow stripe in the middle.Railworld Wildlife Haven
Brian Pearce said the late 1960s "brought us Concorde, a moon landing and the possibility of a 300mph guided land transport system"

Mr Silver, who runs a film company called Fenland on Film, said the track first appeared in 1969, set up by Tracked Hovercraft Limited, a government-backed private company.

It used a linear motor principle designed to propel a train at speeds of 300mph along a concrete monorail.

"There was more track at nearby Earith that was eventually going to join the section at Sutton Gault but it never made it," he said.

"In 1973, the government axed the project after not being overly impressed with the progress being made, and withdrew their backing."

Brian Pearce, chair of trustees at the Railworld Wildlife Haven in Peterborough, where the prototype is now on display, said the idea "combined two British innovations - the hovercraft and linear induction motor - with the goal of speeding up slow rail travel of the time".

Fenland on Film A row of 4m (13ft) high concrete pylons set on large blocks of concrete pillars in a rural field with trees in the background on the horizon.Fenland on Film
The tracks were set up as part of a huge trial in the late 60s and early 70s at Sutton Gault and Earith in rural Cambridgeshire

Mr Silver grew up in the 1990s and cites a revival in Gerry Anderson TV shows for the inspiration to investigate the hover train story locally.

"I loved Thunderbirds, Stingray, all those futuristic 60s views of high-speed transport and space age vehicles, and the hover train was definitely reminiscent of that and it stuck with me," he said.

He said that when he first discovered that the hover train had been tested in the fens, "he could not quite believe it".

John Devine/BBC A public information board about 1m (3ft) square with various pictures and diagrams showing the history of the hover train. Behind it a concrete pillar is visible, part of the track from 1969.John Devine/BBC
A public information board is still in place at the Sutton Gault site. Mr Pearce said the area was chosen because it was "so straight and flat"

Mr Silver said engineers from Cambridgeshire developed the technology alongside Prof Eric Laithwaite in their bid to see the dream of high-speed land travel become a reality.

"Tracked Hovercraft Ltd had the foresight to document testing of the full-size prototype between Earith and Sutton on 35mm film," he said.

He has collected about "four hours of beautiful 35mm film" that he believes has never been seen before, as well as hundreds of photographs, first hand testimonies and interviews with people who worked on the trials.

He said a promo trail for his documentary would be released on 12 May and could be accessed via Fenland on Film.

John Devine/BBC Three large concrete blocks sit in a fen meadow with two river banks rising up on either side the blocks are about 4m (13ft) long, 3m (9ft) high and 60cm (2ft) deep. There are some willow trees and a patch of flooded land on the left.John Devine/BBC
Mr Silver said many people were unaware what the concrete structures left behind in the Fens were, believing them to be "part of a bridge"

Mr Pearce explained that the plan eventually was to "run the hover train to the Thames Estuary Airport - which was an ultimately abandoned plan for a third airport in London".

He said a few test runs were conducted only at Earith, one of which in 1973 produced a speed of more than 100mph.

Brian Pearce Brian Pearce in a selfie photograph, wearing a fine striped shirt and grey fleece, with dark glasses. In the background is one of the original hover train models - a long carriage balancing on a concrete monorailBrian Pearce
Brian Pearce, of Railworld Wildlife Haven in Peterborough, said the hover train combined two British innovations of transport

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