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The E-series was a line of inline four-cylinder automobile engines designed and built by Honda for use in their cars in the 1970s and 1980s. These engines were notable for the use of CVCC technology, introduced in the ED1 engine in the 1975 Civic, which met 1970s emissions standards without using a catalytic converter.
A Honda Civic engine with CVCC. CVCC, or Compound Vortex Controlled Combustion (Japanese: 複合渦流調整燃焼方式, Hepburn: Fukugō Uzuryū Chōsei Nenshō Hōshiki), is an internal combustion engine technology developed and trademarked by the Honda Motor Company.
The following 58 pages use this file: Bad Axe, Michigan; Bay Port, Michigan; Bingham Township, Huron County, Michigan; Bloomfield Township, Huron County, Michigan
The Civic was largely developed as a new platform, and was the result of taking the previous Honda N600 and increasing the length, width, height and wheelbase. The engine displacement was almost double the N600 599 cc (36.6 cu in) at 1,169 cc (71.3 cu in), with two more cylinders and mounted transversely while using water cooling, benefiting from lessons learned from the Honda 1300.
Huron County (/ ˈ h jʊər ɒ n,-ən / HURE-on, -ən) is a county in the U.S. state of Michigan. As of the 2020 Census, the population was 31,407. [2] The county seat is Bad Axe. [3] Huron County is at the northern tip of the Thumb, which is a sub region of Mid Michigan.
It was marketed at a Japanese dealership sales channel called Honda Verno along with the Honda Ballade, a high-luxury model based on the Civic sedan. Also introduced was a new highly fuel efficient I4 model, the five-speed "FE" (Fuel Economy) which was rated at 41 mpg ‑US (5.7 L/100 km; 49 mpg ‑imp ) in the city and 55 mpg ‑US (4.3 L/100 ...
Huron City is an unincorporated community in the township on Pioneer and Huron City Roads near M-25 near the mouth of Willow Creek on Lake Huron at It was formerly a lumber town, destroyed in the Port Huron Fire of 1871 and Thumb Fire of 1881, the town was rebuilt after each, but faded as the lumber industry died out.
As of the census [1] of 2000, there were 873 people, 335 households, and 248 families residing in the township. The population density was 24.4 inhabitants per square mile (9.4/km 2).