Flyboard
Flyboard is a hydroflighting device consisting of a board attached by a hose to a personal watercraft, such as a jet ski, that uses high-pressure water jets to propel a single rider into the air above the water surface for performing acrobatic maneuvers.[1]
Invented by French jet-ski champion Franky Zapata in 2011, the Flyboard draws water through the personal watercraft's impeller and redirects it via the hose to nozzles primarily at the rider's feet and optional hand-held thrusters, enabling heights of up to 15 meters through propulsion governed by Newton's third law of motion.[2][3][4]
First publicly demonstrated at the Jet Ski World Championships in China, it rapidly popularized as an extreme water sport, generating a global industry valued at over $200 million and inspiring turbine-powered variants like Flyboard Air.[5][6]
Zapata's innovations extended to aerial achievements with Flyboard Air, including a successful English Channel crossing in 2019 after an initial setback, highlighting advancements in personal flight technology despite inherent risks of high-speed water propulsion.[7][8]