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* Serve as a mounting or enclosure for a gun projecting in part or whole beyond the hulls of land vehicles and aircraft, notably on [[British_heavy_tanks_of_World_War_I|British heavy tanks]] during World War I.
* Serve as a mounting or enclosure for a gun projecting in part or whole beyond the hulls of land vehicles and aircraft, notably on [[British_heavy_tanks_of_World_War_I|British heavy tanks]] during World War I.


* Take the form of a short wing on the fuselages of [[flying boat]]s, providing hydrodynamic stability when travelling through the water during take off and landing, [[Zeppelin-Lindau Rs.I|as pioneered]] by German aerospace designer and engineer [[Claudius Dornier]] during World War I.
* Take the form of a short wing on the fuselages of [[flying boat]]s, providing hydrodynamic stability when travelling through the water during take off and landing, [[Zeppelin-Lindau Rs.IV|as pioneered]] by German aerospace designer and engineer [[Claudius Dornier]] during World War I.


* Provide storage for fuel or housing for landing gear on larger helicopters such as the [[Sikorsky S-92]] and [[Bell 222]].
* Provide storage for fuel or housing for landing gear on larger helicopters such as the [[Sikorsky S-92]] and [[Bell 222]].

Revision as of 19:12, 30 March 2015

Model of a Pan Am Boeing 314 flying boat with its left sponson visible
MS Princess of Scandinavia, a cruise-ferry with a side sponson
Sponsons may contain weapons in military craft, such as pre-Dreadnought warships and some early British tanks

Sponsons are projections extending from the sides of land vehicles, aircraft or water craft to provide protection, stability, storage locations, mounting points, or equipment housing.

Among their uses sponsons:

  • Extend a watercraft hull dimension at or below the waterline to increase flotation or add lift when underway.
  • Serve as a mounting or enclosure for a gun projecting in part or whole beyond warship's hull, particularly in the pre-Dreadnought era.
  • Serve as a mounting or enclosure for a gun projecting in part or whole beyond the hulls of land vehicles and aircraft, notably on British heavy tanks during World War I.
  • Take the form of a short wing on the fuselages of flying boats, providing hydrodynamic stability when travelling through the water during take off and landing, as pioneered by German aerospace designer and engineer Claudius Dornier during World War I.
  • Provide storage for fuel or housing for landing gear on larger helicopters such as the Sikorsky S-92 and Bell 222.

See also