Under the hood, there are two rows and six columns of high-pressure gas bottles, connected to hydrogen fuel cells. Hydrogen and oxygen undergo an electrochemical reaction, generating electricity to drive the motor.
Hydrogen energy vehicles in the real world have not become popular for several reasons, including cost, safety, technology, patents—Japan once invested heavily in hydrogen technology routes, particularly hydrogen storage, hoping other countries would solve downstream technological problems so they could reap the benefits.
The result was that the hydrogen energy route was abandoned by the global market, and Japan, reluctant to give up, came up with hydrogen-powered motorcycles, a curious vehicle,
with two exposed high-pressure gas bottles on the road, solving the world problem of gas cars not being flammable and electric cars not being explosive,
The good news is that even when you encounter a hundred-ton king on the road, you have the strength for a fight.
