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  2. Spoon Sports - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spoon_Sports

    Spoon Inc., commonly known as Spoon Sports, is a Japanese company specializing in engine tuning and aftermarket parts designed to make Honda cars high performing vehicles. . The company's Type One showroom has helped Honda vehicles become major contenders in motorsports competitions.

  3. Honda V6 hybrid Formula One power unit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honda_V6_hybrid_Formula...

    After Honda's formal F1 exit, the engines remain Honda-developed, produced, assembled, maintained, and trackside supported, and will remain as such until the end of the 2025 season when a new engine era will begin. Honda developed the 2022 RBPTH001 power unit at its research and development centre in Sakura City, Tochigi prefecture, run by ...

  4. Honda Racing Corporation USA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honda_Racing_Corporation_USA

    This was the first V8 ever branded as an Acura and the first racing Honda engine built entirely outside Japan. Elements of the Acura V8 dubbed the AL7R, share similar architecture with the Honda engine used in the Indy Racing League although none of the parts are interchangeable. In 2010 Honda dropped the Acura name in favor of HPD and the car ...

  5. Honda H engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honda_H_engine

    Since then, versions of the H22 would become the Prelude's [2] signature high-performance engine worldwide until the end of Prelude [2] production in 2001. In 1994, Honda of Europe used the H22A cylinder head and the H22A engine block as the Formula 3 engine which was an H22A engine destroked from 2.2 liters to 2.0 liters (F3-2000cc) to compete ...

  6. List of Honda engines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Honda_engines

    Current Honda general-purpose engines are air-cooled 4-stroke gasoline engines but 2-stroke, Diesel, water-cooled engines were also manufactured in the past. The current engine range provide from 1 to 22 hp (0.7 to 16.5 kW). More than 5 million general-purpose engines were manufactured by Honda in 2009.

  7. Mugen Motorsports - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mugen_Motorsports

    Mugen supplied Honda-derived engines to the Jordan Formula One team between 1998 and 2000. In 1991 Mugen prepared Honda V10 engines for Tyrrell (based on engines used by McLaren in 1989 and 1990), but the following year these engines were renamed Mugen MF351H and were transferred to the Footwork team, with drivers Aguri Suzuki and Michele Alboreto.