No need to wait for a flying car, this futuristic hoverbike is actually available for sale!





If you have dreamt of flying solo in a hoverbike, the XTurismo Limited Edition is here to realize your fantasy for an eye-watering $680,000. With a practical hoverbike following the first commercially available flying motorcycle, we can loosely say, the future of the automotive industry is flying and kicking!

We have grown up to numerous concepts of jet packs, wingsuits, flying cars, and of course the hoverbikes. Arguably, it is the idea of a flying car in particular that has left me enthralled all these years. It’s the simplest ideation of a vehicle – primarily for the road – that can conveniently take off vertically to fly over traffic congestions on your way to the office or back home. The far-fetched dream is now closer to fruition, but before a marketable option makes headlines; a Japanese drone company by the name of A.L.I. Technologies have put forth the first practical hoverbike on the market.

Backed by Mitsubishi and star footballer Keisuke Honda, the drone marque’s hoverbike is a future-forward way to ride on –err- over the ground, man, and a few superheroes too! Opening up a new dimension in personal transportation, where hoverbikes will be a common sight, the XTurismo Limited Edition is powered by real-world tech. It arrives with an upper-body reminiscent of an everyday motorbike and is powered by a conventional engine. Driving the engine is four battery-powered motors that propels this innovation at top speeds of 62mph for good 40 minutes on one go.

Weighing about 300kgs, the predominantly black hoverbike with red accents features jet-ski-like stands for staying rock-solid when parked. And it has six rotors that can, according to the demo, lift the bike for good 10 feet off the ground. The rotors are placed strategically – you can find two big ones on the front, while a set of two rotors are packed on the sides of the hovering motorbike.

For those fanaticizing a ride already, the XTurismo hoverbike is currently available for pre-order in Japan and it is likely to be delivered to the enthusiasts in the first quarter of next year. Before you begin filing paperwork to part with your kidney to own the next revolution in transportation, be warned, this is not going to be street legal any time soon. So all of the $680,000 will go into a contraption for hovering practice in the backyard if even that’s permitted by the authorities in your state!

Designer: A.L.I. Technologies





Kalashnikov’s next military gear might be hoverbikes

Popular Mechanics reports that a Russian defense company has developed a flying vehicle that took to the air earlier this week as manufacturers demonstrated what it can do. The hovercraft, built by Kalashnikov Concern, gets its lift from 16 sets of r...

Working Hoverbike Tested: From Russia with Love-itation

Check out this crazy hoverbike test footage from Russia. This guy has only one thought: Don’t move my legs. Don’t move my legs. I love my legs. Please don’t let me lose my legs.


What you’re looking at here is a brief indoor test flight of Russia-based Hoversurf’s latest creation. It is called the Scorpion-3. It looks pretty fun, but it also looks like if you make one wrong move, you will lose your limbs. Maybe all of them. Well, if this guy does lose a limb or two, he is doing it so that we can ride cool hoverbikes in the future, so I thank you in advance for your sacrifice, sir.

Let’s just work on making the design a bit safer, k?

[via Geekologie]

ICYMI: Barely hoverbiking, new hair dryer tech and more

Today on In Case You Missed It: YouTuber Colin Furze teamed up with Ford to build a working hoverbike within just a few weeks, from his shed. It runs off of two diesel engines so granted, it's probably not the most mass-production friendly item, bu...

Homemade Hoverbike Is as Fun (and Dangerous) As It Looks

Colin Furze has a long history of creating crazy contraptions and doing crazy stunts. He may have outdone himself this time with his homemade hoverbike. Yes, it looks fun as hell. It also looks dangerous as hell should something go wrong. He could potentially get cut in half somehow or lose a foot to those blades. Still, it’s totally awesome.

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As Colin points out, this hoverbike has no steering, and not even a seat, but that doesn’t bother Colin. He gets on it and he actually flies. It’s somewhat like the speeder bikes from Return of the Jedi, just not as fine tuned. It’s not very fast or maneuverable either, but I would love to ride this thing.

Check out how it was built here.

[via The Awesomer]

DoD Funding HoverBike Development

Growing up, I had a subscription to the magazine of the Boy Scouts called Boys’ Life. The only part of that magazine I have any recollection of was all the wacky ads in the back for things like x-ray glasses and hover machines built using vacuum cleaner parts. I wanted that hover craft so bad I could hardly stand it.

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The first time I saw this HoverBike that we talked about way back in 2011, I thought of that hovercraft from my youth. I figured it would never be built and put into production, but that bet might have been wrong. Malloy Aeronautics, the designers of said HoverBike, have announced that the U.S. Department of Defense is helping to develop the hovering vehicle into a working product.

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That means we are one-step closer to having HoverBikes of our own. There is no time frame on when the bike might actually be built or when civilians might see them. You can be that the first of these that are made will end up with the military.

[via Reuters]

Robot Rides Hoverbike, We’re All Doomed

Malloy Aeronautics in the UK is developing a flying quadcopter designed for human riders. Right now they are testing a 1/3 scale model proof-of-concept vehicle called the Drone 3 that has a robot riding it. Now imagine a full scale version of this thing chasing you down with a larger robot and outfitted with lasers. It will be all over for us soon.

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The designers say that the hoverbike’s four overlapping fans allow for a stable and maneuverable ride and from what we can see here that seems accurate. This Kickstarter has already met it’s goal, so we can look forward to a future of being hunted down by hoverbike riding robots who want us dead dead dead.

It may be time to start living underground people. You can be the Eloi if you want, but I’m becoming a Morlock!

[via Discovery]