These Hi-Fi Speakers Are Made out of Rocket Fuel Tanks

Dume for space Development increases globally.
The SpaceX rocket, led by CEO Elon Musk, has carried out numerous missions since it put its partially reusable Falcon 9 rocket. The company now has the highest launch frequency in the world, which has helped to increase the number of rocket launches in the world to 254 last year. This is a spectacular increase of more than 20% compared to the previous year.
In Japan, Honda began to develop a reusable rocket, and it was reported in June that it had succeeded and landed in its first launch test. However, although Japan is described as an appropriate location for rocket launching tests because of its geography, there were only five launches in Japan last year, far behind the number of launches by nations with advanced space programs such as the United States, China and Russia.
The Japanese Company & Space project aims to reverse this trend and extend the base of the Japanese space industry. The company has launched a new initiative in cooperation with Noon by Material Record, a research and development project led by the Nomura Corporation Group, which produces acoustic devices using sustainable materials.
This partnership gave birth to debris, a speaker shaped outside the reservoir of a space rocket. The design incorporates scrap parts from the fuel tanks for trade rockets produced in the city of Taiki in Hokkaido.
Taiki is a hub for the space industry in Japan and which houses the Hokkaido space port, which is used by private companies and university research institutes in the world involved in space development. It is also used by Honda for its reusable takeoff and landing tests.



