Breaking Physical Limits to Reshape Future Mobility: Dreame Nebula NEXT Debuts Rocket-Powered Concept Car "Jet Edition" in U.S.
The Chinese appliance maker says the jet boost could make the Nebula NEXT its fastest car, with production planned for 2027.
- On April 27, Dreame Nebula NEXT unveiled the Nebula NEXT 01 Concept Jet Edition in San Francisco, introducing a hypercar that uniquely integrates both a rocket engine and an electric motor.
- The vehicle utilizes a custom dual solid rocket-booster system delivering 100kN of thrust, achieving 0-100 km/h acceleration in 0.9 seconds using wire-controlled architecture and electromagnetic active suspension.
- Dreame Technology aims to transition from software-defined to 'AI-Defined Vehicles' , integrating its Metis Intelligent Agent and High-Level Autonomous Driving Brain to unify cockpit and chassis functions.
- Production goals target 2027, with Dreame stating its goal is to create the 'world's fastest car,' though observers compare these rocket-boosted claims to repeatedly delayed Tesla CEO Elon Musk product promises.
- The four-day DREAME NEXT event showcased the company's 'Human-Car-Home' ecosystem, featuring a dialogue between Stanford University Computer Scientist Sebastian Thrun and Dreame executive Jake Ma on practical AI application.
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Dreame Technology unveils rocket-assisted EV concept with 0.9-second acceleration · TechNode
Dreame Technology on Monday unveiled an experimental high-performance vehicle equipped with rocket boosters at its DREAME NEXT global launch event in the US, as the company signaled ambitions beyond its core smart home business. The concept model, named Nebula Next 01 JET Edition, features a propulsion system that differs sharply from conventional electric vehicles. According to the company, the car is designed with dual solid-fuel rocket booste…
Breaking Physical Limits to Reshape Future Mobility: Dreame Nebula NEXT Debuts Rocket-Powered Concept Car "Jet Edition" in U.S.
/PRNewswire/ -- On April 27, Dreame Nebula NEXT, a global premium EV brand, unveiled a hypercar that uniquely includes both a rocket engine and EV engine
The showcar promises to race up to 100 km/h in less than a second, but the serial version of the car will be more modest and free of rocket accelerators.
We've become accustomed to bold claims from Chinese automakers, even though some have actually been able to deliver surprising technology into production. Perhaps the furthest they've gone is vacuum cleaner manufacturer Dreame, which wants to stuff rocket engines into its cars.
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