tech

Lexus Just Created A Hoverboard And It Works, Even On Water

No kidding.

Cover image via topgear

Awhile back, Lexus shocked everyone by unveiling a seemingly workable hoverboard. In the teaser video, Lexus teases a real-live magnetized hoverboard that the carmaker has been working under wraps for months

Image via Youtube

The board has been in development for 18 months, as Lexus — alongside a team of scientists from IFW Dresden and evico GmbH — have recently concluded a successful testing stage in Barcelona, courtesy of pro skateboarder and hoverboard test rider Ross McGouran.

highsnobiety.com

After close to a month of teasing and speculation, Lexus officially unveils its hoverboard, dubbed SLIDE

Image via Youtube

In the release video, pro skater Ross McGouran is shown testing the hoverboard. Lucky dude.

Image via Youtube

And yes, it works on water too!

Image via Youtube

So, how does the SLIDE hoverboard actually work? One word: MAGNETS

Image via Wealthour

According to Lexus, its hoverboard relies on superconductors and magnets, which combine to repel the force of gravity and lift an object.

wired.com

Permanent magnets then rest underneath the board, as Dr. Oliver de Haas, evico CEO, says, “The magnetic field from the track is effectively ‘frozen’ into the superconductors in the board, maintaining the distance between the board and the track—essentially keeping the board hovering. This force is strong enough to allow the rider to stand and even jump on the board.”

highsnobiety.com

Lexus has specially built a skate park, just for the hoverboard to move around. And yes, this means the hoverboard can't be used anywhere you want. What a bummer.

Lexus' Catalonian skatepark.

Image via TheVerge

The park is made out of wood that has been painted to look like cement, with an embedded magnetic track that had clearly been covered with some sort of plaster in an effort to conceal it. Strike one: the Lexus board can’t be used anywhere you want.

theverge.com

Crafted around an insulated core, the SLIDE employs high temperature superconducting blocks in cryostats

Image via TheVerge

These cryostats are reservoirs of liquid nitrogen that cool the superconductors to -197°C. By placing the board over a track of permanent magnets, the design team is then able to make the board hover by cooling it to its operating temperature as the track’s magnetic flux lines are “pinned” into place.

According to The Verge, the board can only work for around 20 minutes, until liquid nitrogen runs out

Image via TheVerge

One thing to note about the hoverboard is that it only stays "charged" (that is, it hovers) for 20 minutes, give or take, depending on ambient temperature and the weight of the rider. Once the liquid nitrogen evaporates, the board loses its superconductivity and it’s time to "recharge."

theverge.com

Design wise, the hoverboard takes cues from skatedecks and Lexus' design aesthetics

Image via TheVerge

Lexus also details the design process that went into making SLIDE a reality:

It is clear that Lexus made the hoverboard as a marketing tool, instead of a consumer product. So the dream of a real Hoverboard seems pretty unattainable, but hey, we can always hope right?

Image via Giphy

Afterall, who doesn't want to be like Marty Mcfly?

Hoverboards are cool and all that, but have you heard of a hovertrain before?

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