Honda’s U3-X Electric Unicycle Could Outrace the Dying Segway, Sideways

Not a car, not a bike, not a buggy, not a lawn mower. Check out Honda’s one-wheel unicycle. Middle East readers want to know: Does it do dunes?

We’ve written about electric cars, electric motorcycles and scooters, and even electric powered skateboards for an environmentally clean way to get travel short distances.

But now, something new has been developed by the Honda Motor Company that may revolutionize the way we get around even further.

And that device is known as the Honda U3-X Personal Mobility Device that looks more like a figure 8 on wheels – a unicycle that drives sideways.

The device, which only weighs around 10 kilograms – (about 20 pounds) and can be carried on a bus, train, or other mass commuter vehicle, was recently demonstrated to an amazed audience of people walking through NY City’s Time Square, one of the most busy pedestrian locations in the world.

Compared to a Segway, a two wheeled, expensive mobility device which is still a rarity in the Middle East (and seems to be a dying fad any way, but used at the port of Tel Aviv for tourism), Honda’s answer to getting around in busy, people congested locations not only moves forward and backwards, but sideways as well, due to a specially designed wheel that includes a series of  smaller wheels that allow the device to move from side to side.

The Honda gizmo is not a long range transportation vehicle; but neither is the Segway.

Yet it still may be a very viable solution for use in places where one needs to get around quickly, Engadget reports (see their test run), without having to expend energy by walking. The U3-X, still not available for purchase, would be perfect in shopping malls, on large college campuses, and in crowded urban locations like New York City, or even central Cairo or Tel Aviv. Power is supplied by lithium ion batteries, the same as used in electric cars like Better Place, and General Motors’s new Volt electric car.

One full charge allows the device to propel one along for up to an hour.

See the video:

The unique wheel design of the U3-X, is actually a series of smaller wheels that  rotate independently, allowing it to keep a person balanced. Maintaining balance has always been a problem for riding a one wheeled unicycle or even a two wheeled device for many people.

This concept will allow people to use it who have balancing problems, and may also be good for handicapped people as well;  even possibly eliminating the need for a wheel chair for some handicapped people. The device may have other uses too, since it allows people to have both hands free to do other things, including waiting on tables in a large restaurant.

Before you think about going out and buying one, however, Honda says that the U3-X is still considered to be an experimental device; although the company displayed it at the 2009 Tokyo Motor Show, at which a number of electric powered vehicles were exhibited.

Another thing to consider is that this kind of device is not meant to be a substitute for walking, lest we wind up like humans in the 1969 song classic: “In the Year 2525” whose lyrics included: “your legs’ got nothing to do – some machine is doing it for you.”

Maybe walking, from both an environmental and health standpoint, isn’t such a bad way to get around after all. We’d love to see this new Honda unicycle come for a test run in the Middle East.

::Engadget

More articles on electric powered mobility devices:

Freego Electric Scooters Take Tel Aviv Mobility Easy

Trekker Electric Scooters Fly Around the Streets of Tel Aviv

Electric Scooter Market “Gone Wild” May Have Killed Tel Aviv Man

Maurice Picow
Maurice Picowhttps://www.greenprophet.com/
Maurice Picow grew up in Oklahoma City, U.S.A., where he received a B.S. Degree in Business Administration. Following graduation, Maurice embarked on a career as a real estate broker before making the decision to move to Israel. After arriving in Israel, he came involved in the insurance agency business and later in the moving and international relocation fields. Maurice became interested in writing news and commentary articles in the late 1990’s, and now writes feature articles for the The Jerusalem Post as well as being a regular contributor to Green Prophet. He has also written a non-fiction study on Islam, a two volume adventure novel, and is completing a romance novel about a forbidden love affair. Writing topics of particular interest for Green Prophet are those dealing with global warming and climate change, as well as clean technology - particularly electric cars.
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