Honda unveils small light 'personal mobility' device
TOKYO (AP) — Honda’s new “personal mobility” device looks like a unicycle, but all you need to do to zip around on it — sideways as well as forward and back — is lean your weight into the direction you want to go.
The U3–X — available for a test–run for reporters in Tokyo Thursday – was designed to be small, safe and unobtrusive enough to mingle with pedestrians, according to Honda Motor Co.
The single wheel on the U3-X-U stands for “unicycle” and “universal” — is made up of many tiny motor-controlled wheels, packed inside the bigger wheel, allowing the device to swerve in any direction.
It stands upright on its own. Sit on it as though it’s a stool, and shift your weight to drive. The thing maintains its own balance as it scoots along at a speed of up to six kilometers per hour.
Honda president Takanobu Ito said the machine was still “a proposal,” and the company has no sales plans, pricing or firm ideas on where or how it will be used.
Honda declined to give details of the U3–X’s technology, but said it weighs less than 10 kilograms (22 pounds), runs on a full charge for an hour, and has a lithium–ion battery.
“I may want to use it in my home,” Ito mused. “It’d be easier to get around so I might really use it if my legs grow weaker.”
The U3–X takes a bit of getting used to. It was a bit too big for this 1.53 meter (five–foot) tall reporter, making it hard to sit on and control it well.
Although Honda said the machine is meant for the elderly, it’s unclear whether they would be coordinated enough to control the device.
Honda makes the Asimo walking child–shaped robot as well as the Odyssey minivan and Accord sedan. The latest device uses some of the technology of balance and movement developed in the Asimo, Ito said.
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