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Pages in category "Honda ATVs" The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. H. Honda ATC125M; Honda ATC200;
Honda borrowed many parts from its three-wheel ATC250R for the Fourtrax’s design, including the engine and rear suspension. Although the latter was mechanically similar, Honda detuned its engine through reduced compression and less aggressive porting, to ensure that the added weight of the quad would not adversely affect the reliability of ...
Honda responded a year later with the FourTrax TRX250R—a machine that has not been replicated until recently. It currently remains a trophy winner and competitor to big-bore ATVs. Kawasaki responded with its Tecate-4 250. The TRX250R was very similar to the ATC250R it eventually replaced and is often considered one of the greatest sport ATVs ...
The Honda XR series is a range of four-stroke off-road motorcycles that were designed in Japan but assembled all over the world. Some of the XR series came in two versions: R and L . The R version bikes were enduro machines designed for off-road competitive riding.
The Honda XRE 300 is a single-cylinder dual-sport motorcycle designed and manufactured by Honda in Brazil. It was launched in August 2009 to simultaneously replace the Japanese firm's two South American on/off-road motorcycles: the XR250 Tornado and the NX-4 Falcon . [ 1 ]
Formosa Plastics has been involved in a series of deadly explosions at their facilities. After an explosion in a Formosa Plastics polyvinyl chloride manufacturing facility plant in Illiopolis, Illinois, that killed 5 workers and severely injured 3 in April 2004, [29] OSHA fined the company US$300,000 for violations. [30]
In North America, the arcade version was the top-grossing new video game on the RePlay arcade charts in April 1990. [5] The Sega Genesis version was released with little commercial fanfare, and it never made major sales figures.
The Toyota Celica (/ ˈ s ɛ l ɪ k ə / or / s ɛ ˈ l iː k ə /) (Japanese: トヨタ・セリカ, Hepburn: Toyota Serika) is an automobile produced by Toyota from 1970 until 2006. The Celica name derives from the Latin word coelica meaning heavenly or celestial. [3]