Honda: Announces eVTOL: in the USt as early as 2023

Honda: Announces eVTOL: in the USt as early as 2023

Honda Motor Co., Ltd .:

As a new business area

Vertical takeoff and landing electric airplane (eVTOL),
Avatar robot that becomes a human alter ego,
Circulating renewable energy system for the moon,
Announced a small rocket that can be reused.

Honda eVTOL:

“Honda eVTOL” is a hybrid system that combines an electric motor and a gas turbine.

The idea is to realize a long cruising range and provide it as a means of intercity movement.

Honda Avatar Robot:

“Honda Avatar Robot” is a robot that can be controlled remotely like an alter ego.

Regardless of distance or physical restrictions
You can use it to dispatch your own alter ego,
It enables the spatial expansion of oneself.

Sound Material Renewable Energy System:

The system supports lunar activities.

The water that exists on the moon,
Electrolyze with renewable energy power.
Then, it is stored separately in hydrogen and oxygen.

CNET Japan

https://japan.cnet.com/article/35177441/

Honda developing flying car

Honda Motor

has revealed that it has been developing a flying car.

It plans to make the vehicle
capable of relatively long-range flights using technologies it has amassed in its business jet project.

Honda says
it has been developing electric vertical take-off and landing, or eVTOL, aircraft with the goal of launching it in 2030 or later.

Flying cars
are drawing attention as a next-generation mode of transport.

The Japanese firm says
many similar vehicles now being developed by other domestic and foreign companies have a flight range of some 100 kilometers.

But Honda says
its eVTOL will boast a range of 400 kilometers and allow transportation between cities.

Honda plans
to conduct test flights of its eVTOL in the United States as early as 2023.

The company also says
it will develop avatar robots with which their users can perform tasks and experience things remotely.

It says it is also developing
small rockets with a goal to use them as launch vehicles for low-earth orbit satellites.

It says
it is aiming to make the rockets reusable by enabling at least some of their components to land back on Earth after their launches.

NHK WORLD-JAPAN News

https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20211001_01/