Team-BHP > Motorbikes
Register New Topics New Posts Top Thanked Team-BHP FAQ


Reply
  Search this Thread
5,886 views
Old 4th August 2019, 00:58   #1
BHPian
 
jailbird_fynix's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2018
Location: (òÓ,)_\,,/
Posts: 466
Thanked: 3,085 Times
A bird? A plane? Nope, it's a Flying Bike from Honda!

Honda applies for 'flying bike' patents


A bird? A plane? Nope, it's a Flying Bike from Honda!-img_20190803_235011.jpg


The idea of a flying ‘bike’ has long been the stuff of sci-fi or ambitious crowd-funders promising technology that always seems to be just a couple of years away, but a new patent application in Japan shows that none other than Honda is working on just such an idea.

Of course, there’s always a question of just how much like a motorcycle these things can be. Wheels are a pretty integral part of anyone’s idea of a bike; ‘cycle’ means wheel, after all, coming from the same Greek word that gives us ‘circle’. Despite that, flying machines that carry a single, exposed rider seem destined to be given the ‘flying motorcycle’ name, whether it’s Ludovic Lazareth’s LMV946, the prototype demonstrated by Dubai’s police last year..

A bird? A plane? Nope, it's a Flying Bike from Honda!-img_20190803_234828.jpg

..or even the homemade hoverbike created by mad inventor Colin Furze.

A bird? A plane? Nope, it's a Flying Bike from Honda!-img_20190803_235039.jpg

(This is the guy who made an actual Mad Max - style flame-erupting guitar)

A bird? A plane? Nope, it's a Flying Bike from Honda!-img_20190803_234733.jpg

Even Star Wars got in on the act with the Speeder Bikes in 'Return of the Jedi'.

A bird? A plane? Nope, it's a Flying Bike from Honda!-img_20190803_235138.jpg

Then there was the BMW hover bike concept that really never "took off" ().

A bird? A plane? Nope, it's a Flying Bike from Honda!-img_20190803_234707.jpg




Most of these things are mere flights of fantasy, but with a name like Honda attached to it, the idea of a flying bike becomes a lot more serious.

The Honda Flying Bike

Of course, like most other so-called flying motorcycles, the machine shown in the Honda patent document is really a form of multi-copter, based on the same technology that brings us the commercial drones that have become such a normal part of modern life. As with those drones, it’s electric rather than petrol-powered.

In the Honda’s case, it’s actually an octo-copter, with eight sets of spinning blades, each with their own electric motor and arranged in four pairs. A simple box-section chassis connects the two ends of the machine and houses a large battery pack and the electronic units.

Control is achieved through a pair of joysticks, one either side, and while the seat looks like it’s out of a car the pilot straddles the main chassis, giving a cruiser-style riding position.

Quite what purpose the flying bike serves remains to be seen. With no ability to glide like an aeroplane or auto-rotate like a helicopter, there’s little chance of escape in the event of a complete power failure, making vehicles like this particularly difficult to be certified as airworthy. With eight motors, the Honda design could probably survive the loss of power to a couple of them, though, and presumably a parachute would be an option for more serious failures.

As usual with this sort of thing, don’t hold your breath for a production version. But Honda has got a growing presence in the field of air transport thanks to its revolutionary and successful HondaJet, so something like this might one day reach the skies.

Source - Ben Purvis (Bennetts UK)


Pffft!! We, Indians, have been flying our bikes since forever.

A bird? A plane? Nope, it's a Flying Bike from Honda!-img_20190803_234905.jpg
jailbird_fynix is offline   (4) Thanks
Old 4th August 2019, 14:40   #2
Distinguished - BHPian
 
Join Date: Aug 2014
Location: Delhi-NCR
Posts: 4,071
Thanked: 64,320 Times
Re: A bird? A plane? Nope, it's a Flying Bike from Honda!

Interesting as a concept but in my opinion impractical in real life usage as a mode of transport. It may find some application in law enforcement or environment monitoring or recreation but cant see it getting used for regular transport. These flying cars, flying scooters, flying soldiers all get resurrected every 15 to 20 years since the late 1940s. Also the spatial skill and muscle to eye control needed to transport yourself in three dimensions is rather too complex for the average car or scooter driver. And yes then there is the cost and lane discipline. For recreation I can see these coming soon.
V.Narayan is offline   (4) Thanks
Reply

Most Viewed


Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Team-BHP.com
Proudly powered by E2E Networks