Two manga worlds. One absurd solar universe.

Solar Jet Skis and Solar Jets in the Sky.

Brad wants an electric Jet Ski to power the house. Captain SolarJet wants to fly on pure sunlight. Tomoko, Chief Battery, Dock Ojisan, Runway Ojisan, and the Permit Goblin are here to make both ideas safer.

Floating Battery Airport Microgrids Critical Loads No Cheap Cords Safety Poster
The jet flies where the sun don’t shine. The Jet Ski floats where Brad should not use an extension cord.

Choose your manga episode

Two ridiculous ideas. Two useful power lessons.

SolarJets.com is a manga comedy about impossible clean-power dreams that accidentally teach real lessons: storage matters, timing matters, transfer equipment matters, and nobody should improvise with high-voltage batteries.

Episode 1

The Solar Jet Ski to Power Your Home

Brad sees an electric Jet Ski and announces it is not a toy — it is a floating battery with handlebars. Tomoko sees the electric bill. Chief Battery says, “Not an extension cord.”

Floating Battery Critical Loads Marina Power Safety First

Episode 2

Solar Jets in the Sky

Captain SolarJet wants to fly on sunshine alone. Then night arrives. Then Cloudzilla arrives. Then Chief Battery explains why airports need storage, microgrids, and runway power.

Airport Solar Battery Backup Microgrids Future Flight
Tomoko holding the electric bill while Brad pitches an electric Jet Ski as a floating battery

Manga 1: The household energy argument

Brad wants a Jet Ski. Tomoko wants the bill paid.

The Jet Ski manga starts at home, where Brad tries to justify a water toy as a strategic energy asset. The serious lesson is clear: a battery on water is still a battery, and any home-power idea needs real transfer equipment, critical-load planning, marine-rated gear, and professional installation.

  • Brad’s dream: play by day, power by night.
  • Tomoko’s test: does it actually help the bill?
  • Chief Battery’s warning: no cheap cords, no hacks.
  • Dock Ojisan’s rule: full battery, strong coffee, no drama.

Jet Ski manga panels

Floating battery with adult supervision.

Captain SolarJet standing heroically in front of a solar jet at night

Manga 2: The airport power fantasy

Captain SolarJet discovers night.

The sky manga starts with a heroic pilot who believes a solar jet can run on confidence and sunlight. Then Cloudzilla blocks the sun, Madame Kilowatt brings peak rates, Runway Ojisan drinks coffee, and Chief Battery explains the real story: airport solar needs storage and control.

  • Solar gets the takeoff. Batteries are the landing gear.
  • Airport solar canopies turn pavement into power infrastructure.
  • Runway power matters after sunset.
  • The microgrid control room becomes the airport brain.
Don’t Hack the Jet Ski safety poster showing unsafe cords and proper engineered marine equipment

The rule that saves the joke

Have fun. Stay safe. Think smart.

SolarJets.com can be ridiculous because the safety line is not vague. Do not hack batteries, Jet Skis, homes, docks, boats, airports, or utility power. Use proper equipment, professional design, and qualified installers.

Same joke. Same lesson.

Everything needs batteries, controls, and common sense.

Whether the battery is floating at a marina or sitting in an airport hangar, the SolarJets.com rule stays the same: clean power is funnier, safer, and more useful when it is engineered properly.

Electric Jet Ski as a floating battery concept

Floating Battery Manga

The Jet Ski idea becomes useful only when it is connected through proper engineered systems.

Open Jet Ski concept
Airport solar canopies

Airport Solar

The solar jet joke lands on real ground power: canopies, hangars, chargers, batteries, and controls.

Open airport solar
Electric Jet Ski safety poster

Electric Jet Ski Power FAQ

The serious answers behind the comedy: no hacks, no backfeeding, no wet-dock shortcuts.

Read the FAQ
SolarJets poster with Captain SolarJet and the slogan We Land Where the Sun Don’t Shine

The master slogan

We land where the sun don’t shine.

In the sky episode, the slogan explains airport batteries and runway power. In the Jet Ski episode, it explains why Brad needs more than enthusiasm and a cord.

Solar is the takeoff. Batteries are the landing gear. Chief Battery is the adult in the room.