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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 Cub F is a motorized bicycle, sometimes also categorized as a moped, introduced by Honda in 1952.It was a "clip-on" gasoline engine kit for bicycles produced by other manufacturers, identified by the slogan the white tank and the red engine (白いタンクに赤いエンジン) and popular for a design that prevented the two-stroke engine exhaust and oil from hitting the rider.
1984 Honda Fourtrax 200 (Honda's first four-wheel ATV) 1990-1991 Honda Fourtrax 200 "Trunkmobile" 1991-1997 Honda Fourtrax 200 Type II; 1986-1988 Honda Fourtrax 200SX; 1997–present Honda Recon 250; 1985-1987 Honda Fourtrax 250; 1986-1989 Honda Fourtrax 250R; 1987–1988, 1991-1992 Honda Fourtrax 250X; 2006–present Honda Sportrax 250EX/250X
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 Honda PC50 is a moped produced by the Honda Motor Company in Japan from May 1969 until at least 1983. The PC50, though much smaller and lighter, had some similar features to Honda's popular C50 /70 /90 Super Cub line, with a step-through pressed-steel frame, a fuel tank under the saddle, a chain cover, and optionally equipped with leg shields,
The Honda Cub F, a 1952–1954 motorized bicycle. The Honda Super Cub , a motorcycle made since 1958. The Honda CR110 or Cub Racer, a privateer version of the RC110 Grand Prix racing motorcycle, made in 1961
The Japanese Honda Motor Co Ltd soon appointed Boon Siew the sole distributor for Honda motorbikes in the country, as the first 50 units of Honda 4-stroke Cub were being imported into Malaysia. A factory was built in Penang to assemble the Honda Cub and the Honda motorcycle assembled in Malaysia was renamed the Boon Siew Honda.
The Suzuka factory is Honda's second factory, and began operations April 1960. It originally produced the Honda Super Cub, followed by the Honda TN360, Honda S500, Honda 1300, Honda N360, Honda Civic, the scooters called Honda Roadpal and Honda Tact, the Honda City, Honda Integra, and the Honda Today.