Posts Tagged ‘Honda’

Friday Bike Crush #3

Friday, May 13th, 2011

We’ve been obsessed with this bike for months.

It’s basically , a stripped-​​down Honda Dominator with the street tracker treatment — that amounts to a a sliced off rear subframe, a big headlight, some nice little extras and loads of extraneous plastic stuff stripped off.

There’s something about this Street Tracker style that’s captured out imaginations.

The fellow who built this particular beauty has been kind enough to stick a brief ‘how-​​to’ story on his blog so that the fettlers amongst you can take inspir­ation and do one of these for yourselves.

The ‘Elsinore’ moniker for the unini­tiated refers to the mentalist off road Grand prix held in Elsinore California (not sure if it still a regular occur­rence) and that featured so beauti­fully in the contantly referrred-​​to documentary on American bike culture On Any Sunday (below).

Dreaming of a sunny weekend…

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Soichiro Honda

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

Dictatorship has fallen out of fashion recently. But there’s no doubt that it’s the best way to build great cars, and from great cars build a successful car business. We’re talking an enlightened, benevolent despotism here, but let’s be in no doubt: you need one guy at the top, with an utterly clear, focussed picture of what he wants to create, intol­erant of the blurring and compromise and greyness that big organ­iz­a­tions inflict on even the best ideas.

What great car was ever created by a bureau­cracy? Not one.

And how many are inextricably linked with the man that made them, and had the authority to execute his ideas without inter­ference? Ford and his Model T. Ettore Bugatti, and everything he ever made. Porsche and the Beetle. Issigonis and the Mini. Gordon Murray and the McLaren F1. Ferdinand Piech and the entire Volkswagen empire, that will probably soon be the largest carmaker in the world.

And Soichiro Honda, and the Honda Super Cub. Eh?

Honda’s founder might not be as closely associated with one car as the other titans of the automotive industry. But his scooter is the best-​​selling vehicle of all time with over 60 million produced. It has easily outsold the most popular car, the Toyota Corolla, of which around 40 million have been made but has been constantly reinvented. The world’s obsession with cars means we’ve neglected Soichiro’s influence, but he put more of the world on wheels – and for less – than any of the great carmakers.


Image: Honda

Just as import­antly, the company he created is still shot through with his restless engin­eering creativity. Today Honda makes everything from that Super Cub to private jets, a direct reflection of the wide-​​ranging obses­sions of its founder. Honda wasn’t just an engineer, but a painter, potter and pilot too. He got it from his Dad, Gihei, a black­smith who moonlighted in amateur dentistry, and his Mum, a weaver who had plainly missed her vocation as an engineer and modified her loom for better performance.

Young Soichiro spent so much time in his father’s forge that he was nicknamed ‘the black-​​nosed weasel’; it sounds like less of an insult in Japanese. He famously ran after the first car he ever saw, and as it roared away from him fell to his knees to sniff a spot of oil it had dropped. Aged eleven, he ‘borrowed’ some of the house­keeping money and his father’s bicycle and rode 20 miles to see a display by an American pilot in an early aircraft, and when the money he’d pinched proved insuf­fi­cient to buy a ticket he climbed a tree to get a better view.


Image: Honda

Maybe the world should have known then. An appren­ticeship at an early Tokyo car dealerhip followed; Soichiro ended up as the ‘riding mechnic’ on the owner’s aircraft-​​engined racing car, for which he would machine parts from scratch. Working for someone else didn’t suit him for long, and at 21 he left to start his own dealership. But he was more inter­ested in invention than business; first came a new design of spoked wheel, the proceeds of which bought him a Harley Davidson and a speedboat.

Then he decided he was going to improve the design of piston rings, so he enrolled in night school to learn metal­lurgy. As they expelled him for not taking a note or sitting an exam, he was using the knowledge he had absorbed to found a business he would shortly sell to Toyota. And then, as Japan entered the war, it was aircraft propellers; Honda’s new production process cut the manufac­turing time from a week to fifteen minutes.

All this by the age of 33, remember. They were calling him the Edison of Japan.


Image: Joe Wilson commis­sioned for Influx

He started the Honda Motor Company in 1948, and you probably know the rest. It began with anaemic motorized bicycles; the Super Cub is called Super because it was signi­fic­antly more powerful than the weedy efforts it super­ceded from 1958.

Honda took on a partner, Takeo Fujisawa, to handle business, which he claimed to be no good at despite a series of successful start-​​ups. But it was Fujisawa who steered the young Honda Motor Company through a series of financial crises and into the relative stability that funded Soichiro’s continued ‘dreaming’.

It was motor­sport next; Honda won its first TT in 1961 after just three attempts and its first Grand Prix in its second season in 1965.


Image: Honda

Soichiro might have professed to be uninter­ested in business, but he won’t have been unaware of the impact these victories had on the way the world viewed Honda. They instantly set it apart from Toyota, and made those of us who want our cars and bikes to be something more than affordable and reliable – but affordable and reliable too  — want a Honda. Soichiro Honda died in 1992.

His ideas didn’t.

Six of Honda's Best

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

CT-​​50 Motra (1983)

Though it was designed only for the Japanese market, the Motra was a bold, quirky design that was way ahead of its time in terms of the global thirst for modern minis. Featuring that military style rugged chassis and a unique two stage gearbox (low for offroad, high for the highway), who knows how this might have become part of eighties automotive lore had it been issued in Europe?H


Honda S2000 (1999)

Honda’s last mass-​​production nod to their sporting heritage was built almost entirely from the ground-​​up using all original parts — to celebrate the company’s half-​​century — and out of the same metic­ulous factory responsible for the NSX. This very affordable Boxster-​​beater was probably the best machine for weekend jaunts around A road round­abouts ever invented. With a naturally aspirated two litre engine you had to rev it hard to get it working, but there have been few more involving drives. Why oh why did they get rid of this beauty?


NSX (1990)

Dreamt up in the tech labs of dormant and passionate Honda F1 squad – then tweaked by the great Ayrton Senna : the NSX is a no-​​nonsense, technically brilliant long wheel based supercar that now looks coolly retro in an eighties kind of way. Like Duran Duran but much more fun and less pretence.


RC 166 (1966)

Ridden in 1966 to unmatched levels of brilliance by the great Mike Hailwood, the 250 cc sonic rocket rocked six cylinders mediated by a battery of gorgeous trumpets. Considered by many to be the most beautiful racing bike ever to grace a circuit. The RC 166 Made its main compet­ition from MV look clunky and old world. Check the incredible sound.


Honda Insight (Generation One) 1999

As the first mass-​​produced hybrid to hit America the gen one insight was everything a weird futur­istic motor should be. It had cowled wheels, was tapered madly in the rear and featured a 67 Horsepower petrol engine augmented by the electric motor. It was super light and strangely stylish – and the fact that it only had two seats made it feel like a Jetsons-​​era runabout for the man of the future. By far the best-​​looking hybrid ever to roll out of a proper factory…

 


RA 272 (1965)

Richie Ginther piloted Honda’s first GP winner in Mexico 1965. The RA 272 was relat­ively heavy for its period, but its V12 engine packed around 230 BHP and revved cleanly and serenely up to 14,000. But what’s more, it was stagger­ingly pretty – and featured a manifold as close to carnal in its aesthetic appeal as it’s possible to be. We partic­u­larly dig the championship-​​white-​​and-​​rising-​​sun combo. As a kid in the early seventies when you dreamt of racing cars, this was what they looked like.

The Impossible Dream...

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

Honda’s F1 history dates back to the early sixties when the company looked to translate its motor­cycling success onto four wheels.

Honda tried to strike a deal with Lotus and Colin Chapman, which had won the world champi­onship with Jim Clark in 1963 but when Chapman decided against it, the Japanese pressed ahead with their own car and engine. The Honda RA271E, with a load-​​bearing transversely-​​mounted V12, made its debut at Nurburgring in 1964 with young American Ronnie Bucknum driving.

Starting a trend that would continue, F1 Hondas were prodi­giously powerful if sometimes heavy. The RA272 gave around 230bhp, estimated to be 10% more than its rivals, and allowed ex-​​Ferrari driver Richie Ginther to win the company’s 11th race, the 1965 Mexican GP, the last race for the 1.5-litre F1 category.

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The new 3-​​litre V12-​​engined car ran second on its debut in ’66 and the following year Honda elected to run a single car for John Surtees — the only man to win world champi­on­ships on two wheels and four – who had fallen out with Ferrari. Lola’s Eric Broadley designed the RA301 chassis, dubbed the Hondola, which first raced in the ’67 Italian GP at Monza. Surtees battled with Jim Clark and Jack Brabham and when one ran out of fuel and the other ran wide, the car won its first GP having led the one and only lap it would ever lead!

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In 1968 there was pressure to run an air-​​cooled V12 to promote air-​​cooled road cars and the RA302, using light­weight magnesium parts, was built. On testing it, Surtees declared it dangerous and refused to race it. Honda France brought in Jo Schlesser to drive it in the French GP after Johnny Servoz-​​Gavin turned it down. The unfor­tunate Schlesser died in a horrible fireball accident when he crashed on the second lap of the last F1 race to be run at Rouen. Surtees finished second in the RA301. Surtees again refused to race the 302 at Monza and shortly after­wards Honda announced a ‘temporary withdrawal’ from F1.

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That lasted until 1983, when Honda returned as an engine supplier with the new Spirit team, which graduated from F2 amid F1’s turbo era. The RA163E engine showed enough promise for Williams to do a deal to run Hondas the following year. Keke Rosberg found on/​off turbo power delivery and a flexing chassis a tricky combin­ation, but took the Williams-​​Honda to victory in Dallas.

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At the end of 1985, Rosberg and Nigel Mansell won the last three grands prix in Williams-​​Hondas. The team was dominant in ’86 as Mansell and Nelson Piquet won nine races and the constructors champi­onship but lost out in the drivers champi­onship to Alain Prost when Mansell suffered a spectacular tyre blow-​​out 18 laps from the end of the season finale in Adelaide.

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The team won 11 of 16 races in ’87, with Piquet claiming his third drivers’ title. Honda, however, switched allegiance to McLaren in ’88 as the RA168 engine gave Ayrton Senna his first world title in a year that saw the Brazilian and team mate Prost win 15 of 16 races for McLaren-​​Honda.

It would have been a clean sweep had not Senna tripped over a backmarking Williams-​​Judd a handful if laps before the end of the Italian GP. In a great irony, the Williams was driven by Jo Schlesser’s nephew Jean Louis who, standing in for Mansell, who had chicken pox, was making his first F1 start on the eve of his 40th birthday…

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In an era of continuing McLaren domin­ation Prost (89) and Senna (90) took world titles with V10 Honda power, then Senna repeated the success and took his third and final crown in ’91 with the V12 Honda RA121E-​​engined McLaren MP4-​​6. At the end of ’92, however, with the active suspension Williams-​​Renault now dominant, Honda withdrew once again.

They were due to return with a chassis being tested by Jos Verstappen and developed by Harvey Postlethwaite in ’99 but the project was stillborn and Postlethwaite died shortly after­wards from a heart attack at a Barcelona test.

Again as engine suppliers only, Honda returned with British American Racing and Jordan, eventually buying out BAR in 045 and returning solely as the Honda Racing F1 Team in ’06. Jenson Button gave them a first win in nearly 40 years with the RA806 in a mixed-​​condition Hungarian GP, but the going was tough.

It got tougher still in 07 – 8 with no sign of a compet­itive car. Ross Brawn had been recruited, however, and early in a hopeless 08 season, the decision was taken to concen­trate on next year’s car. During that time a Japanese aerody­nam­icist came up with the double diffuser that was key to the ’09 season. Suddenly though, in a shock announcement in December 08, with the worldwide recession taking hold, Honda pulled the plug. Button went on to win six of the first seven ‘09 races en route to the champi­onship. Honda reputedly injected over £90m running budget to avoid having to close down the Brackley factory. The car though, ran as a Brawn and carried a Mercedes engine. If only they’d known…

This Honda Life

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

My name is Michael and I have always been attracted to Honda motor­cycles. There, I’ve said it. Some say they’re boring, unima­gin­ative, conser­vative, but for better or worse Honda was an integral part of my early biking life and I still bear the scars – mainly mental. Here are three that took me through puberty and beyond in a flurry of crashes, break­downs and teststerone-​​fuelled idiocy.

1975 Honda CB125S
I’d long lusted after a 250 to ride on L-​​plates, but just before I turned 17 the law changed and a 125 was the limit. My dad had used a CB125 as a work hack and passed it on to me. My mates all had screaming strokers, but I loved the fruity tone from the lightly-​​silenced four-​​stroke single. I also fell for its vaguely US West Coast lines, though as I’d squeak to a halt outside Pelsall Fish Bar for a saveloy and chips I was certainly more Dennis Healey than Dennis Hopper.

On a 100-​​mile trip to Wales with a mate on the back, Wrexham was marked by a gorgeous girl and our slack-​​jawed gawping, the traffic ahead suddenly of minor importance. We caught the back of the flatbed truck a glancing blow, though more humili­ating was having this amazing girl step over me as I sprawled on the pavement, the prone bike revving its nuts off in the road.

I loved that bike, with its green-​​faced Nippon-​​Seiko speedo and rev counter, but not enough to maintain it properly. Eventually, the fist-​​marks in the tank bore shameful testimony to my inability to prevent it breaking down. I’m sorry, little Honda.

1979 CB250N Superdream
Ah, the much-​​maligned Superdream, more often known as the Wet Dream. When I bought it, a handsome second-​​hand job in silver, as far as my mates were concerned I might as well have donned a Nazi Stormtrooper uniform and ridden an uncon­trol­lable ostrich, such was my social status. But to me it felt like a mighty beast after the 125. Unfortunately, I remember it most for pinning me in the bottom of a ditch. One night I overcooked a country lane right-​​hander and, as everything went into slow motion, I rode up the verge, still leaning, and next minute it was all high revs and crunching under­growth, rarely a good combin­ation when riding a road bike. Thankfully, although the bike lay just above me, it had stalled itself and everything went calm and quiet except for the ticking and pinging of a hot parallel twin. Quiet, that is, until the angry bees arrived. To this day I can’t believe the speed at which I extricated myself from beneath a scalding, briar-​​tangled Superdream in the pitch black.

1976 CB750 Four F2
The CB750 Four is quite right­fully held up as a ground-​​breaking motor­cycle of great signi­ficance. However, my hastily-​​bought ‘bargain’ can only be seen as a spirit-​​breaking machine notable only as a metaphor for youthful stupidity.

I was at university and broke, though a summer job had given me a lump of cash that I’d promised the bank manager would be used to reduce my overdraft. But after a couple of years without a bike, I’d got the fever. I ‘viewed’ the dirty mongrel at night with the cash practically held out in front of me on upturned palms. It had been ‘tweaked’, meaning the clutch slipped, the tappets and camchain rattled like C3P0 perched on a washing machine on spin cycle and compression was danger­ously high. It had red foam grips, a hot (ie, loud) pipe and the street presence of a sickly, balding labrador dragging its failing hind legs. Of course, I worshipped it, so much so that I soon insisted on replacing the death-​​rattle camchain, working under a plastic sheet in the yard of my student house, fuelled by home-​​grown weed, beer and samosas.
The result was predictably disastrous. My post-​​rebuild outing filled Leamington Spa’s main street with scowling shoppers choking on billowing white oil smoke. Taking the head off revealed a holed piston and a level of butchery by the former owner/​s that would warrant a war crimes tribunal.

Despite replacing the piston, it never again ran properly and languished at the kerb outside my student house in a quiet back street. However, it wasn’t completely dead and regularly, arriving home from the pub around midnight, I’d jump on the kickstarter and revel in the poorly-​​tuned racket from the raucous pipe. My neigh­bours would open their bedroom windows and shout with joy.

You see, they, too, had fallen in love with Honda.

Evolution of the Civic

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

First & Second Generation (1972−1983)

Introduced in 1972, the original Civic featured US-​​focussed innov­ation s like front discs, reclining seats and radio as standard. It was notori­ously prone to corrosion, so you won’t find many original first gener­ation examples these days. Coming on like a mini from the land of the rising sun, this was in fact a true child of the oil crisis. Come the eighties the formula was refreshed with a new, more angular design, a choice of larger engines and the emissions reducing CVCC was intro­duced across the range.

 

Third Generation (1983−86)

The concept for the third-​​generation Civic was “maximum space for people, minimum space for mechanisms.” Based on this concept Honda developed three-​​, four– and five-​​door variations of the Civic — a three-​​door hatchback and four-​​door saloon, as well as a five-​​door shuttle offering superior utility space. The Civic Si was intro­duced in 1984, which featured an engine wit double overhead cam technology — the two door CRX variants were intro­duced here for the first time: and the first familar lines of moddable civic culture crept over the horizon…

 

Fourth Generation (1987−91)

Developers of the fourth-​​generation Civic emphasized “exhil­ar­ating performance based on human sensit­iv­ities.” Targeting higher efficiency, Honda created its Hyper 16-​​valve engine in five variations, from 1,300cc to 1,500cc. The 4th gen also saw the intro­duction of all-​​round double wishbone suspension, different dimen­sions and a lowered front three quarter…

 

Fifth Generation (1991−94)

The new series heralded the arrival of new VTEC engine variations to provide an excellent mix of driving performance and high fuel efficiency. These included the 170-​​horsepower DOHC VTEC, the ultrahigh fuel efficiency VTEC-​​E and a high-​​balance VTEC. The new cars repres­ented a leap forward in safety and envir­on­mental friend­liness. There were enhanced safety features and a high proportion of recyc­lable components.

 

Sixth Generation (1995−1999)

In the mid nineties Honda sought to transcend the Civic’s tradi­tional “car for the masses” appeal. Reaching out to an increas­ingly global market it incor­porated a range of new techno­logies to satisfy strong demand for high performance, safety and low emissions. These included the 3-​​stage VTEC engine, boasting high output and high fuel efficiency and Honda Multimatic, a next-​​generation, variable-​​speed automatic transmission.

 

Seventh Generation (2000−2004)

The seventh-​​generation Civic was developed as the “benchmark for compact cars,” satis­fying all important criteria, with maximum cabin space, super­lative economy and smooth ride, and unpar­alleled safety for occupants and pedes­trians. The interior space was made more comfortable based on a low, flat-​​floor design enabling occupants to easily move between front and rear seats. Due to Honda’s G-​​CON collision safety technology, the seventh-​​generation Civic has met the highest safety standards, winning “Car of the Year Japan” awards in 2001 and 2002.

 

Eight gener­ation (2005-​​Present)

In October 2005 production began at the Civic plant in Swindon — a facility that cost over one and a quarter billion pounds to build and start to operate. The product has on the whole lived up to its venerable badge, though at first its striking new lines appeared to divide comment­ators and punters alike.

The Great John Surtees

Tuesday, March 8th, 2011


Driving for the Honda racing team, Surtees adjusts his goggles before the 1967 Monaco Grand Prix in Monte Carlo. — Photograph © Schlegelmilch/​Corbis

John Surtees remains the only racer ever to have won a World champi­onship on a bike and in car.

In our opinion the ability to race is something in-​​born and instinctive. Deft handling of a vehicle is a valuable skill and one to which one should aspire. It requires after all an incredibly complex combin­ation of skills and sharp percep­tions — as well as the bravery and confidence to put one’s life on the line based on the knowledge of ones’ abilities. Bravery. Boldness. Self knowledge. The stuff of which heroes are made.


John Surtees on an MV Agusta, Isle of Man Senior TT, 1956. © National Motor Museum

It might be that racing was passed down through the Surtees family DNA. John’s dad had been a motorbike dealer and an enthu­si­astic racer himself and the boy had thus been around the grease and roar of engines all his young life.

Surtees won the 500cc world champi­onship astride an MV Agusta in 1956 — at a time when the stretched out, knee down style of racing was being pioneered. Four years later he signed for the Lotus F1 team and began racing cars full time. In 1964 he took the driver’s champi­onship with Scuderia Ferrari and in doing so forged the legend that remains untouched.


Scuderia Ferrari Formula One race team in 1965 including drivers Lorenzo Bandini (in car), John Surtees (far right) and race engineer Mauro Forghieri (third from right). — Image © Manuel Litran/​Corbis

The Surtees years racing saw amazing changes and techno­lo­gical devel­op­ments in all forms of motor­sport — and it’s fitting that the man was the first top-​​line racer to pilot a Honda — a company whose passionate attention to detail and design was to usher in a whole new techno­lo­gically exact era into F1.

We’ve heard rumours that Valentino Rossi might get a crack at top level motor­sport sooner or later. We wouldn’t bet that he’d surpass Surtees’s achievement. Or, for that matter, that he’d be able to do it with half as much style.

Great Japanese footage of Surtees’s 1967 victory at Monza.

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