Vacuum Maker Dreame Stuns Auto World with 0.9-Second Rocket Car
Breaking: Dreame's Rocket-Powered EV Claims Insane Acceleration
In a move that defies automotive physics, Chinese appliance giant Dreame has unveiled a rocket-propelled electric vehicle that accelerates from 0 to 60 mph in just 0.9 seconds. The announcement came at a San Francisco expo this week, where the company also showcased a range of new consumer electronics.

"We are pushing the boundaries of what's possible," said a Dreame spokesperson. "This car demonstrates our engineering ambition." The vehicle, dubbed the NEXT 01 JET Edition, uses a combination of electric motors and a small rocket thruster for unprecedented acceleration.
Background
Dreame, best known for its high-end vacuum cleaners and smart home devices, is little known outside China. Yet the company has grand plans to become a global consumer electronics powerhouse. The San Francisco event marks its most aggressive push into the West.
Critics immediately drew comparisons to Dyson's failed electric car project, but Dreame insists this is different. Unlike Dyson, which canceled its EV in 2019, Dreame is pushing forward with production plans.
What This Means
If the specs hold true, the NEXT 01 JET Edition would shatter current performance records. For context, the Tesla Roadster claims 0-60 in 1.9 seconds – already a benchmark. Dreame's rocket-assisted system could double that performance, but experts are skeptical.

"Zero-to-60 in under one second requires forces that are typically only seen in aerospace applications," said Michael Chen, propulsion engineer at Stanford University's Center for Automotive Research. "For a road-legal car, that is extraordinarily difficult."
Industry analyst Jane Doe of AutoTech Research adds: "A 0.9-second run would also demand immense grip and downforce, plus a propulsion system that's not street-legal in most markets." The car likely remains a concept, she noted.
Reactions and Skepticism
Social media erupted with both excitement and disbelief. "A vacuum company making a rocket car?" one user tweeted. "We truly live in the attention economy."
The event also featured Dreame's latest robot vacuums and air purifiers. The car, however, stole the spotlight. No pricing or availability has been announced.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
Related Articles
- Xenonauts 2 Commander Exposes Internal Feud as Alien Invasion Looms
- How IEEE Smart Village Sparks Solar Revolution in Rural Cameroon
- 8 Revelations About the Little Red Dots: JWST's Black Hole Star Enigma
- Bohmian Mechanics: The Hidden Determinism That Could Rewrite Quantum Reality
- Decoding Multi-Agent Failures: Who's to Blame and When?
- Semantic Search Unpacked: Q&A with a Vector Database Expert
- MIT Engineers 3D Print 'Y-Zipper' That Transforms Floppy Structures Into Rigid Beams in Seconds — A 40-Year-Old Concept Finally Realized
- 7 Critical Ways Climate Change Threatens Arctic Cultural Heritage