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The Honda Super Cub (or Honda Cub) is a Honda underbone motorcycle with a four-stroke single-cylinder engine ranging in displacement from 49 to 124 cc (3.0 to 7.6 cu in).. In continuous manufacture since 1958 with production surpassing 60 million in 2008, 87 million in 2014, and 100 million in 2017, [2] the Super Cub is the most produced motor vehicle * in history. [3]
The Honda SS50 is a 50 cc (3.1 cu in) motorcycle manufactured by the Honda Motor Company. Predecessors were the OHV C110/C11/C114 and OHC S50. Produced from 1961 onwards, the Honda 50 Sport (type C110 and C111) variant of the Super Cub , laid out the basics of all future models: It had a pressed-steel frame, hydraulic front and rear forks, a 49 ...
50 Super Cub C105, CD105: 54 Sports Cub C115(Canada Only) 54 Trail 55 (C105H, C105T, CA105T) 54 Super Cub C65, S65: 63 C70 Passport, CD70: 72 Motosport (SL70) 72 Motosport (XL70) 72 ST70, CT70 Trail 70: 72 Scrambler (CL70) 72 XL80: 79 Aero 80 (NH80) 80 XR80: 80 CR85R Expert: 85 Super Cub C90 (12 volt) 86 Super Cub CM90, Honda Trail 90 C200: 87 ...
A Base 50 engine is a generic term for engines that are reverse-engineered from the Honda 49 cc (3.0 cu in) air-cooled four-stroke single cylinder engine. Honda first offered these engines in 1958, on their Honda Super Cub 50. Honda has offered variations of this engine continuously, in sizes up to 124 cc (7.6 cu in), since its introduction.
The initial model numbers are Super Cub numbers with the suffix H for Hunter, or T for Trail. These bikes are technically not CT-series bikes, but C- and CA- series variants. However, Honda would give the new Trail Cub line its own CT designation by 1964, so any overview of the CT-series should include these first models for clarity.
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 speed ranges for each gear.
The Honda CB77, or Super Hawk, is a 305 cc (18.6 cu in) straight-twin motorcycle produced from 1961 until 1967. It is remembered today as Honda's first sport bike.It is a landmark model in Honda's advances in Western motorcycle markets of the 1960s, [4] noted for its speed and power as well as its reliability, and is regarded as one of the bikes that set the standard for modern motorcycles.
Since their arrival in Grand Prix racing in 1959, the Honda team had impressed everyone with their commitment and professionalism. Buoyed by the team's success in the 1961 125cc World Championship, with booming sales of Honda's 50cc Super Cub road bike and the Sports Cub C110, and the announcement by the Fédération Internationale Motocycliste of a 50cc World Championship for motorcycles for ...