Honda conducts successful launch and landing of experimental reusable rocket

LorenDB | 1191 points

Here is the video which they should have put in the post:

https://global.honda/content/dam/site/global-en/topics-new/c...

3ds | a day ago

First time I saw a domain named `honda`. On further research [1], I see that many companies have Top Level Domains of their name. Why did IANA/ICANN allow TLDs of company's names?

[1]: https://data.iana.org/TLD/tlds-alpha-by-domain.txt

kapildev | 19 hours ago

In a mature space launch economy, there is room for every combination of cost and capacity and timing (launch frequency). Like scooters and taxis and truck and trains and cargo ships, each has its place.

Don't imagine because this rocket is a certain size or lift capacity, that it isn't serious. And, this was just an R&D technology test. Who knows where they'll go from here.

JoeAltmaier | 2 hours ago

Question why is it so easy today to build reusable rockets? Is it because the onboard cpu speed of the chips can solve more granular control problems with low latency?

whatever1 | a day ago

For reference, Rocket Lab's Electron has a wet mass of 13,000 kg. This rocket is much smaller at 1,312 kg wet mass.

robszumski | a day ago

I never thought I’d mention Honda and reusable rockets in the same sentence. But that’s exactly what makes tech exciting. When a company you didn’t expect does something bold and impressive, it changes how you see the whole field. Honda’s long history of quiet, precise engineering might be just what space exploration needs more of right now.

Daisywh | 12 hours ago

> reaching an altitude of 271.4 m

I wonder if BPS .pace got further with his solid fuel thrust vectoring? Mustn't be far off that if not. https://bps.space/products/signal-r2

_joel | a day ago

They might be able to replace their F1 electric engine part for 2026 with a jet engine. it will prevent it from not working in the middle of the straight.

romain_batlle | 6 hours ago

I guess its healthy for the competition to exist. There will be more innovation moving forward. For Japanese it was long due.

methuselah_in | 11 hours ago

This is a tiny rocket going up 300ms and coming back down. Happy for them but they're a long way from any utility ( and a decade+ behind other companies )

leesec | a day ago

I often described my wife's old Honda Civic, which we finally sold (still running and able to be driven) w/ just north of 340,000 miles, as having been to the moon and on its way back. I like the idea that someday Honda hardware could, in fact, send something to the moon.

EvanAnderson | a day ago

I guess when you have decades of combustion, control, and automation know-how, this isn't such a stretch. Curious to see if they'll seriously push toward suborbital launches by 2029

RataNova | 6 hours ago

Initially wanted to say I’m impressed they got it on the first launch

But, couldn’t specifically tell if this was indeed the first launch or not, and perhaps there were some private failures before - anyone know?

cududa | a day ago

One small step for Japan, one big step for space industry competition.

walterbell | a day ago

Big congratulations to the engineers! Also had no idea that .honda is a TLD that's really cool.

ghxst | a day ago

It's impressive that Honda pulled this off without much fanfare. While most headlines are about Tesla or SpaceX, Honda is quietly proving that serious engineering can come from unexpected places. I’m curious if they’re planning to go beyond demos and into actual launch services.

guicen | 13 hours ago

I think there's about 5 or 6 private startups on the brink of attempting orbital booster landings within the next few months. This... is at least a decade behind that, if they're serious.

Note that they don't appear to have an orbital engine yet—this thing's far too small, it has to be some kind of one-off for this demo flight. Most of the competition leaped directly to testing an engine they were developing for orbital launches, in their suborbital hops.

perihelions | a day ago

The most reliable rocket

adikulkarni11 | a day ago

I might as well ask here though this is probably a bit off topic: for smaller rockets why are catapults not used? Seems like it could save a bit on fuel and maybe even a stage.

IgorPartola | 18 hours ago
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| a day ago

No-one thought to make a video of this momentous occasion?

jonplackett | a day ago
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| a day ago

If I was Japan I'd be interested in some of the "one time use" use cases as well given the current geopolitical state of affairs.

pwarner | a day ago

Congratulations to our friends in Japan!

pmdulaney | a day ago
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| a day ago

Is this a precursor to a viable alternative to any of SpaceX products?

brianbreslin | a day ago

...looking forward to my rocket-powered Honda Fit!

"you meet the nicest people on a Honda" <https://www.vintag.es/2017/09/you-meet-nicest-people-on-hond...>

I don't know what kind of people you meet on that other, better-known, reusable rocket company.

mac3n | a day ago

vtec kicked in!

atdaemon | 21 hours ago

Yay Honda ... competition!

I want the NSX edition.

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/v00pN4FyfuM

LightBug1 | a day ago

HONDA???

dangoodmanUT | 20 hours ago

Remember Asimo: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASIMO

I'd really like to see them scale this up commercially quicker than they did with the humanoid robot they built well ahead of many others.

DisjointedHunt | 21 hours ago

I wouldn't have expected Honda to enter this space.

Why the huge release of steam from the top of the rocket at the end? Release of heat that builds up during the descent? (Though it's not depending that fast, so it wouldn't be heat from atmospheric friction.)

insane_dreamer | 21 hours ago

its not really high in the atmosphere but its a good start

finally SpaceX got competition

tonyhart7 | 17 hours ago

Honda has a TLD????

artursapek | a day ago

first time ive seen a large corporation do something that indicated they were trying to enter the market that spacex created. i imagine honda entering the race is as big a deal for space exploration as when the first starship touched down

smeeger | 14 hours ago

so now any company can get its own TLD? that's cool.

tzury | a day ago

[dead]

selfselfgo | a day ago

[dead]

be87581d | 11 hours ago

Those japanese rockets are much smaller compared to our big american sized rockets

financypants | a day ago