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Imagine living in a Jetsons world. First step is wireless charging for transporatation and robotics.


Super Volt: Ang Buong Larawan – Ang Aming Wireless Charging Systems para sa Pilipinas at ang Pasig River Pilot
Ang Super Volt ay nagbuo ng kinabukasan ng electric mobility sa Pilipinas — walang kable, mabilis, at accessible para sa lahat. Mula sa urban corridors para sa e-trikes hanggang sa highway charging para sa mga kotse at mabibigat na fleets, ang aming mga sistema ay idinisenyo upang alisin ang range anxiety, bawasan ang gastos, at suportahan ang mas malinis na hangin sa mga lungsod at probinsya. Narito ang malinaw na overview ng aming buong lineup — lahat plug-free, modular, at
Michael Alexander
1 day ago5 min read


Super Volt is building the future of electric mobility in the Philippines — full system overview.
Super Volt is building the future of electric mobility in the Philippines — cable-free, fast, and accessible for everyone. From urban e-trike corridors to highway charging for cars and heavy-duty fleets, our systems are designed to eliminate range anxiety, reduce costs, and support cleaner air across cities and provinces. Here’s a clear overview of our full lineup — all plug-free, modular, and ready to scale nationwide. 1. Pasig River Pilot (PRP) – Bidirectional Urban Corrido
Michael Alexander
1 day ago4 min read


Super Volt Pasig River Pilot: A New Era for E-Trike Mobility in Metro Manila
Metro Manila’s e-trike drivers face daily challenges: unpredictable range, long charging waits, and fuel costs that eat into earnings. The Super Volt Pasig River Pilot changes that. This 5-mile (8 km) bidirectional wireless charging corridor along the Pasig River lets e-trikes, e-bikes, and light delivery pods (up to 20 kWh batteries) charge while moving—no plugs, no downtime, no barriers. It’s built to support mixed light traffic, giving drivers the freedom to serve more cu
Michael Alexander
3 days ago2 min read


Super Volt Pasig River Pilot: Pagpapagana ng Kinabukasan ng Urban Mobility
Ang Pasig River Pilot ay higit pa sa isang proyekto—ito ang unang hakbang tungo sa pagbabago kung paano gumagalaw ang mga Pilipino sa kanilang mga lungsod. Ipinagmamalaki naming ipakilala ang Super Volt Pasig River Pilot , isang makabagong 5-milya (8 km) na dynamic wireless charging corridor sa kahabaan ng Ilog Pasig. Ang bidirectional na sistema na ito ay magbibigay-daan sa mga e-trike at tricycle na mag-charge nang walang putol habang gumagalaw—walang plug, walang paghinto,
Michael Alexander
5 days ago4 min read


Super Volt Pasig River Pilot: Powering the Future of Urban Mobility
The Pasig River Pilot is more than a project—it's the first step toward transforming how Filipinos move through their cities. We’re proud to present the Super Volt Pasig River Pilot , a groundbreaking 5-mile (8 km) dynamic wireless charging corridor along the Pasig River. This bidirectional system will allow e-trikes and tricycles to charge seamlessly while in motion—no plugs, no stops, no downtime. Designed for the heart of Metro Manila, the pilot will deliver clean, reliabl
Michael Alexander
5 days ago4 min read


Tesla’s 1915 Vision of Wireless Power & Transportation – Super Volt Is Bringing It to Life in 2026
Nikola Tesla saw the future of transportation over a century ago. In this powerful excerpt from “The Wonder World To Be Created by Electricity” (Manufacturer’s Record, September 9, 1915), he described the shift from fuel to electricity, the rise of wireless energy transmission, and the ultimate annihilation of distance: “In transportation a great change is now going on. The trolley lines are being extended, the steam locomotive is making place for the electric motor… The idea
Michael Alexander
5 days ago2 min read


Finally, a charging system that levels the playing field for everyone.
Imagine owning an electric vehicle as a Person with Disability (PWD) — no more struggling to get out of your car or wheelchair to fumble with plugs and cables at a traditional charging station. With Super Volt wireless charging corridors and static zones, it's as simple as driving up or rolling past. Your vehicle's Battery Management System (BMS) with built-in RFID is automatically recognized by the inverter — power turns on instantly, hands-free, and shuts off when you're do
Michael Alexander
7 days ago2 min read


Finally, a ride that's accessible for everyone.
Imagine wireless charging corridors and static zones designed with People with Disabilities (PWD) in mind — no struggling with plugs or cables, no awkward docking stations, just roll up (or drive up) and charge hands-free while you rest or grab a coffee. Like how every modern bathroom in the world is adapted for PWD with grab bars, low sinks, and wide doors, Super Volt corridors could make EV charging as inclusive as possible: level paths, barrier-mounted transmitters at whee
Michael Alexander
7 days ago1 min read


Sa wakas, biyahe na para sa lahat.
Isipin mo: wireless charging corridors at static zones na dinisenyo para sa Persons with Disabilities (PWD) — walang hirap sa plugs o cables, walang awkward na docking, basta dumaan ka lang (o mag-drive) at nagcha-charge na habang nagpapahinga o nagkakape. Parang kung paano ang bawat modernong banyo sa mundo ay ina-adjust para sa PWD na may grab bars, mababang lababo, at malawak na pinto, ang Super Volt corridors ay maaaring gawing inclusive ang EV charging: level paths, tran
Michael Alexander
7 days ago1 min read


Remember when traffic meant smoke and gas fumes?
Remember when traffic meant: Black smoke in your face every day Third shower before lunch just to feel clean Birds too scared to sing because of the noise E-trikes crawling because battery low again Now imagine this instead: Silent glide along the Pasig path Blue glow under your wheels — charging while you move Coffee in one hand, ensaymada in the other Birds actually singing overhead again No fumes. No wait. No drama. This isn’t fantasy. This is Super Volt corridors coming.
Michael Alexander
Mar 111 min read


The Day EDSA Became a Breeze – A Letter from 2035
Friends, Ten years ago, in 2026, EDSA was a nightmare we all knew too well — the endless crawl from Cubao to Makati, diesel fumes choking the air, e-trikes sputtering on low battery, and the constant honk of frustration. It was the symbol of everything wrong with our mobility: wasteful, polluted, and stuck. We were wrong to think it would stay that way forever. By late 2026, the wars in Venezuela, Gaza, and Iran had dragged on for half a decade. Oil prices didn't just spike —
Michael Alexander
Mar 113 min read


Why hasn’t wireless EV charging taken off yet?
Most people think it’s because the tech isn’t ready — but that’s not the full story. For the last 10–15 years, almost every major project chased the same “obvious” path: Embed coils continuously under the entire road High power (50–200 kW) for fast cars on highways Full-road reconstruction, no gaps, no compromises The result? Costs exploded ($1.5–3.5 million per lane-km in Sweden, Korea, Israel pilots). Roads had to be torn up, repaved, and maintained for thermal expansion, w
Michael Alexander
Mar 112 min read


Finally, a charging system that levels the playing field for everyone.
Imagine owning an electric vehicle as a Person with Disability (PWD) — no more struggling to get out of your car or wheelchair to fumble with plugs and cables at a traditional charging station. With Super Volt wireless charging corridors and static zones, it's as simple as driving up or rolling past. Your vehicle's Battery Management System (BMS) with built-in RFID is automatically recognized by the inverter — power turns on instantly, hands-free, and shuts off when you're do
Michael Alexander
Mar 112 min read


The Day Gas Became History – A Letter from 2035
Friends, Ten years ago, in 2025, most of us still believed the future would look a lot like the past — just with slightly better batteries and longer charging cables. We were wrong. By early 2026, something quietly shifted. Wars in Venezuela, Gaza, and Iran had dragged on for half a decade. Oil prices didn’t just spike — they stayed spiked. $8, $10, sometimes $14 a gallon in parts of the world. In America, the average family was spending $600–$900 more per month just to drive
Michael Alexander
Mar 33 min read
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