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  2. Honda Odyssey (ATV) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honda_Odyssey_(ATV)

    Honda Odyssey was a line of single-seat four-wheel [1] all-terrain vehicles produced by the Honda Motor Company between 1977 and 1989. 1979 Honda Odyssey FL250. Note the original engine has been replaced with a Polaris 440 cc snowmobile engine. The original engine is a 250cc single cylinder air-cooled two stroke engine.

  3. List of Honda engines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Honda_engines

    The Honda Marine BF350 is Honda's first commercially available V8. The water-cooled outboard motor is designed for 25-feet+ boats. The water-cooled outboard motor is designed for 25-feet+ boats. It has a displacement of 4952 cc (302 ci) and produces 350 HP at 5500 RPM.

  4. List of Honda motorcycles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Honda_motorcycles

    1980 Honda ATC185; 1981-1983 Honda ATC185S ... 1977-1988 Honda Odyssey 250 and 350; 1989-1990 Honda Pilot 400; 1990 Honda Duet (prototype) ... List of Honda motorcycles.

  5. List of Honda transmissions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Honda_transmissions

    Below is a list of Honda automatic transmissions: [4] 1973–1979 H2 — 2-speed Honda Civic, Honda Accord, ... Honda Odyssey, Honda Accord 2.0T, Acura RDX ...

  6. List of Honda automobiles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Honda_automobiles

    1980 1986 Beat: 1991 1996 Capa: 1998 2002 City/Jazz: 1981 1986 Clarity: 2008 2014 2016 2021 Formerly Honda FCX Clarity in 2007 through 2014 CR-X: 1983 1991 a.k.a. Ballade Sports CR-X or Civic CR-X CR-X del Sol: 1992 1997 CR-Z: 2011 2016 Crossroad: 1993 1998 2007 2010 Crosstour: 2010 2015 Concerto: 1988 1994 Domani: 1992 2004 Element: 2002 2011 ...

  7. Honda Odyssey (North America) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honda_Odyssey_(North_America)

    The 1995 Odyssey was introduced in 1994 as Honda's first minivan. [5] [6] It was based on the Accord platform, with a 4-cylinder engine, all-disc anti-lock braking, all wishbone suspension, and a four-speed automatic transmission with a steering-column-mounted shifter and a hill-hold feature marketed as Grade Logic. [6]