Lexus is developing a hoverboard you can actually ride
Lexus has revealed that its been working on developing a hoverboard for the past 18 months.
In the video, the board appears to hover above the ground.
It works using liquid nitrogen-cooled superconductors and fixed magnets. However, that means that it only works on a metal track so it’s not exactly a “rideable” hoverboard just yet.
Earlier this year a kickstarter campaign was launched for the Hendo Hoverboard, which is strikingly similar to the Lexus board, operating using the same magnetic field architecture.
Given that this is the year of ‘Back to the Future,’ I doubt Lexus will be the last company to jump on the bandwagon either.
The latest video in Lexus’ Amazing in Motion series
reveals what the company is claiming is a working hoverboard that
manages to float about an inch off the ground. It’s a far cry from what
we saw in Back to the Future 2, but has the carmaker brought us one step closer to our dreams?
We’ve seen plenty of hoverboards and hover toys and hover miscellanery
over the years, and they all rely on super-strong magnets to stay
aloft. But the more weight you intend to add, the colder and stronger
those magnets need to be. Lexus claims its hoverboard uses liquid
nitrogen-cooled superconductors and permanent magnets to support an
actual rider, hence the foggy mist coming off the board.
We reached
out to Lexus for more information about its supposed breakthrough, but
so far the company has been very tight-lipped about the specifics. It
did reveal that the hoverboard has been in development for over 18
months by teams in both Germany and London, and it’s currently being
tested by a professional skateboarder in Barcelona, although riding it
is supposedly an entirely different experience.
When it
comes to hoverboards, we desperately want to believe. After all, 2015 is
here, and it looks nothing like the future predicted in Back to the Future 2. Why shouldn’t we have floating skateboards by now?
But there
are lots of clues that give us reason not to get our hopes up this time.
Every hover device that relies on superconductors only works on a special magnetic surface, and this board appears to be floating on concrete at a regular old skate park. Update: Lexus has admitted that the board only works on special metallic surfaces, and that’s not just concrete seen in that video.
The video
also doesn’t actually show someone riding it, although Lexus has
promised more videos of it being tested, just not right now. So what do
you think? Is this just another publicity stunt loosely based on
existing science? Or has Lexus actually managed to get a working
facsimile of Marty McFly’s second coolest ride?
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