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The Honda Beat is a kei car produced by the Japanese company Honda from May 1991 until February 1996. It is a two-seater roadster with a rear mid-engine, rear-wheel-drive layout. It was the last car to be approved by Soichiro Honda, before he died in 1991. In total around 33,600 were made, with roughly two-thirds of these built in the first ...
The Honda FC50, also known as the Honda Beat, is a 50 cc (3.1 cu in) scooter manufactured by Honda in 1983. It was produced mainly for the Japanese domestic market — although both new and used models were exported from Japan—making it a fairly hard-to-find scooter. It was available in red, black, or white.
Honda Dream 2E: 160 Hornet CBR: 162 Unicorn: 162.7 SP 160: 162.71 Juno M85: 169 CD175: 174 Super Sport (CB175) 174 XL175: 175 Hornet 2.0: 184.40 CB 200X: 184.4 Honda Dream 6E: 189 Juno K: 189 RoadMaster/Twinstar (CD200) 194 Reflex (TLR200) 194 Tiger 2000 196 Phantom (TA200) 197 CB200: 198 CL200: 198 Fatcat (TR200) 199 Honda Dream 4E: 219 Juno ...
This engine was borrowed from the Honda Beat, although the Today's engine was tuned for more low-end torque than the high-end Beat. MTREC-engined models received a three-spoke steering wheel and a tachometer. Power outputs were 48 PS (35 kW) at 6300 rpm for the regular model and 58 PS (43 kW) at 7300 rpm for the MTREC-equipped versions; torque ...
The CB125F replaces the Honda CBF125, a model which had been in production since 2008 and which was Europe's best selling motorcycle. The official launch price was lower than the price of the previous CBF125. [citation needed] The new model will be manufactured in China, whereas the previous model was manufactured in India. It was launched in ...
The Honda CT110 is a small dual-sport motorcycle made by Honda in Japan since 1980 and is sold in various parts of the world. The bike has sold well worldwide. [1]The CT110 replaced the CT90, which was essentially the same general design but with a smaller displacement engine and points ignition while the CT110 has solid state electronic ignition.
The Honda CB1100F is a standard motorcycle that was made only in 1983 by Honda, based on their line of DOHC air-cooled inline four engines. Honda introduced the similar CB1100 in 2010. History
Honda was third, with a 22% market share. Its reputation in Thailand before the decade of the 1990s was poor. Things changed in 1989 with the introduction of the "Nova", a two-stroke bike that Honda rode to sales leadership in 1989. Honda had forecast sales of 2,000–3,000 Novas per month, but 10,000 per month became the sales norm.