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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 ...
Allen Millyard. Allen Millyard from Thatcham, Berkshire, England, [1][failed verification][2] is a mechanical engineer and a custom bike builder. For over 25 years, he has designed and created numerous ingenious motorcycle specials. Most of these are derived from factory-built machines, and include a Honda SS50 -based V-twin, [3] (and thereby ...
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.
Honda C71, C76, C72, C77 Dream. The 250 cc (15 cu in) Honda C71 and C72 Dream, and the identical C76 and C77 bikes with 305 cc (18.6 cu in) displacement, were the first larger-capacity motorcycles that Honda mass-exported. They were characterised by a pressed steel frame and alloy overhead cam, twin-cylinder engine, and were very well equipped ...
The Honda RC110 was the Honda racing team's first 50cc Grand Prix motorcycle racer. It was conceived in 1961 and raced during the 1962 season. [ 3 ] As the machine was developed during the season, it was renamed the RC111 and most surviving Honda records do not distinguish between the two designations. [ 2 ]
The Yamaha FS1-E has a 49 cc (3.0 cu in), single cylinder, two-stroke, air-cooled, rotary disc-valved engine with a four-speed gearbox. The FS1-E was the FS1 with the suffix E, which stood for England (differing from the models sold in other countries as the FS1-E had more cycle parts in common with other UK-imported Yamaha models).
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The Honda RA271 was Honda 's first Formula One racing car to enter a race. The chief engineer on the project was Yoshio Nakamura, with Tadashi Kume in charge of engine development. It was driven in three races during 1964 by American driver Ronnie Bucknum . The car was developed from the company's 1963 prototype, retrospectively designated RA270.