Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Honda XL175 was a motorcycle produced by Honda. The XL175 first entered the market in 1973 as a lightweight dual-sport motorcycle , and the model continued in production through 1978. The XL175 had a 173cc single cylinder OHC four-stroke engine mated to a 5-speed transmission and was started via a kickstarter only (no electric starter). [ 1 ]
The Honda Sport 90, Super 90, or S90, is a motorcycle produced by Honda from 1964 to 1969. [1] The Sport 90 was based on the Honda Super Cub and uses an 89.6 cc (5.47 cu in) single-cylinder OHC air-cooled engine. The engine links to a four-speed manual transmission. There is no tachometer but the speedometer indicates
The protests, combined with reports of a 19-year-old woman dying in an accident caused by her Firenza's steering failing, prompted intervention by the Canadian government. GM denied the problems and attempted to protect the Firenza's reputation through deceptive marketing before withdrawing it from the Canadian market in early 1973. [54]
However, some of the early VF models suffered mechanical problems, mainly as a result of poor quality camshafts (the "chocolate cams"). Honda, alarmed that they were losing their hard-won reputation for reliability, moved to introduce the VFR750 motorcycles featuring gear-driven over head cams and a very high build quality. The first three or ...
An animation of an electronic Aston Martin speedometer's self-test routine, showing how an analogue speedometer hand may indicate the vehicle's speed A Ford speedometer, showing both mph (outer) and km/h (inner), as well as an odometer in miles A digital, LCD speedometer in a Honda Insight. A speedometer or speed meter is a gauge that measures ...
The Honda CB175 is a standard motorcycle made by Honda from 1969 to 1973. [ 1 ] [ 3 ] It had a 174 cc (10.6 cu in) four-stroke, straight-twin engine with a single overhead camshaft , two valves per cylinder, dual slide-valve carburetors, and dual exhausts.
A Minnesota woman was left with a ‘nearly totaled car’ after getting illegally towed from a Chicago parking spot — city says it could take months before it considers covering repair costs
Speed wobble (also known as shimmy, tank-slapper, [1] or death wobble) is a rapid side-to-side shaking of a vehicle's wheel(s) that occurs at high speeds and can lead to loss of control.