Our inventory of used Honda autos:
| Honda Civic |
Honda Insight |
Honda Accord |
Honda Prelude |
| Honda S2000 |
Honda Odyssey |
|
|
| CIVIC |
| Model |
Picture |
Specs |
| |
|
|
| INSIGHT |
| Model |
Picture |
Specs |
| |
|
|
| ACCORD |
| Model |
Picture |
Specs |
| |
|
|
| PRELUDE |
| Model |
Picture |
Specs |
| |
|
|
| S2000 |
| Model |
Picture |
Specs |
| |
|
|
| ODYSSEY |
| Model |
Picture |
Specs |
| |
|
|
About Honda:
Honda Motor Company, Limited (NYSE: HMC), or simply called Honda, is a Japanese
multinational corporation, engine manufacturer and engineering corporation. The
company is perhaps most notable for its automobiles and motorcycles, having
passed Nissan to become the second largest seller of autos in
Japan. Honda also produces a long list of other
products: trucks, scooters, robots, jets and jet engines, ATV, water craft,
electrical generators, marine engines, lawn and garden equipment, and
aeronautical and other mobile technologies. Honda's line of luxury cars are
branded Acura in North America and China. More recently they have ventured into
the world of mountain bikes, producing the very first bike to use an internal
gear changing system in the Honda RN-01 G-cross.
With more than 14 million internal combustion engines built each year, Honda is
the largest engine-maker in the world. In 2004 , the company began to produce
diesel motors, which were very quiet while not requiring particulate filters to
pass pollution standards. It is arguable, however, that the foundation of
Honda's success is the motorcycle division.
Honda is headquartered in Tokyo. Their shares trade on the Tokyo Stock Exchange
and the New York Stock Exchange, as well as exchanges in Osaka, Nagoya, Sapporo,
Kyoto, Fukuoka, London, Paris and Switzerland. American Honda Motor Co. is based
in Torrance, California. Honda Canada Inc. is headquartered in the Scarborough,
Ontario district of Toronto, Ontario, and is building new corporate headquarters
in Richmond Hill, Ontario, scheduled to relocate in 2008. Honda of Canada
Manufacturing is based in Alliston, Ontario. Honda has also created many joint
ventures around the world, such as Honda Siel Cars India Ltd , Hero Honda
Motorcycles India Ltd, Dongfeng Honda Automobile Company in China and Honda
Atlas Cars Pakistan.
Soichiro Honda was a mechanic who, after working at Art Shokai, developed his own
design for piston rings in 1938 . He attempted to sell them to Toyota who did
not reject his first design as believed. He constructed a new
facility to supply Toyota, but soon after, during World War II, the Honda piston
manufacturing facilities were almost completely destroyed.
Soichiro Honda created a new company with what he had left in the Japanese
market that was decimated by World War II; his country was starved of money and
fuel, but still in need of basic transportation. Honda, utilizing his
manufacturing facilities, attached an engine to a bicycle which created a cheap
and efficient transport. He gave his company the name Honda Giken Kōgyō
Kabushiki Kaisha which translates to Honda Research Institute Company Ltd.
Despite its grandiose name, the first facility bearing that name was a simple
wooden shack where Mr. Honda and his associates would fit the engines to
bicycles. The official Japanese name for Honda Motor Company Ltd. remains the
same in honor of Soichiro Honda's efforts. On 24 September 1948 the Honda Motor
Co. was officially founded in Japan.
Honda began to produce a range of scooters and motorcycles and Soichiro Honda
quickly recovered from the losses incurred during the war. Honda's first
motorcycle to be put on sale was the 1947 A-Type (one year before the company
was officially founded). However, Honda's first full-fledged motorcycle on the
market was the 1949 Dream D-Type. It was equipped with a 98cc engine producing
around 3 horsepower. This was followed by a number of successful launches of
highly popular scooters throughout the 1950s.
Honda Super Cub C50In 1958, the American Honda Company was founded and only one
year later, Honda introduced its first model in the United States, the 1959
Honda C100 Super Cub. The Honda Cub holds the title of being the best-selling
vehicle in history, with around 50 million units sold around the world.[4] By
the 1970s, Honda was the largest producer of motorcycles in the world, a title
it has never relinquished.
In the United States during the 1960s, large motorcycles had the image of being
ridden by tough, hardened characters. It was an image fostered by owners of
Harley Davidson motorcycles, but Honda countered this public perception with
their successful "You meet the nicest people on a Honda" advertising program.
Honda introduced their new SOHC inline 4-cylinder 750 in 1969 , which was
immediately successful and established this configuration as one of the most
popular for performance motorcycles, even to this day.
Honda began developing prototypes for road cars in the early 1960s, mostly
intended for the Japanese market. The first production vehicle by Honda was the
1963 T360, a tiny pickup truck featuring 4 different body styles (including a
traditional truck bed and a panel van) and a 360cc, 30hp engine. This was
followed two months later by Honda's first production automobile, the S500. The
S500 was a 2 door roadster featuring a 492cc engine capable of 44 hp with a high
9,500 RPM redline. It was fitted to a 4-speed transmission with the rear wheels
being chain driven. Mr. Honda took his extensive knowledge of motorcycles and
applied it to making his car, of which the chain drive and high redline are
evidence.
At the time, nearly all of the Japanese automakers were associated with the
former zaibatsu, or keiretsu--Japanese business conglomerates. These large
companies had close ties with the government who urged them to absorb smaller
carmakers into large brands that could be marketed internationally. Since the
government had extensive control over the industry, it was unheard of for a
small, independent company to mass produce vehicles, thus making Honda's success
historical in the Japanese economy.
Though participating in international motorsport (see Racing), Honda was having
difficulty selling its automobiles in the United States. Built for Japanese
buyers, Honda's small cars had failed to gain the interest of American buyers.
Honda's first automobile imported to the United States was the N600, sold in
Hawaii in 1969. In 1970 , the car was imported to California and beyond, but its
tiny 600 cc engine and minuscule dimensions made it very unpopular with the
American public.
Honda Civic
Honda finally established a foothold in the American market in 1972
with the introduction of the Civic—larger than their previous models, but still
small compared to the typical American car—just as the 1973 energy crisis was
impacting worldwide economies. New emissions laws in the US requiring American
car makers to add expensive smog pumps and catalytic converters to engines
increased car prices. However, Honda introduced an innovative variation on the
stratified charge engine, the CVCC (Compound Vortex-Controlled Combustion) in
the 1975 Civic, this allowed the Civic to meet emission standards without a smog
pump or a catalytic converter. Due to its more complete combustion it also
obtained the lowest fuel consumption rating of any vehicle available on the
American market for four years during its production.[5] American companies were
slow to begin producing small, fuel efficient cars, which gave the Honda Civic a
chance to sell well, as well as prove Honda's reputation for reliability and
further expand its customer loyalty.
Honda Accord
In 1976 , the new, larger-than-the-Civic Accord was immediately
popular because of its value, economy, and fun-to-drive nature. The Accord has
since consistently been one of the best selling cars in the United States, and
evolved into a large mid-size for the North American market with V6 and hybrid
versions.
In 1982 , Honda was the first Japanese car manufacturer to build car plants in
the US, starting with an Accord plant in Marysville, Ohio. They now have four
plants located in Ohio: two in Marysville (the Marysville Auto Plant and the
Marysville Motorcycle Plant), one in East Liberty, Ohio, and an engine plant in
Anna, Ohio. They also have plants in Lincoln, Alabama (Honda Manufacturing of
Alabama) and Timmonsville, South Carolina and have recently (2006) opened a new
plant in Tallapoosa, Georgia. Honda also has an extensive aftermarket parts
operation located in Marysville, Ohio, and a research and development facility
in Raymond, Ohio. Honda's North American and U.S. headquarters are located in
Torrance, California. Honda's Canadian and many US-market Civics have been
manufactured in their plant in Alliston, Ontario since 1986 . On 27 June, 2006,
Honda announced that another vehicle assembly facility will be opening in North
America, this time in Greensburg, Indiana. Its completion is expected in 2008.
Honda was the first Japanese automaker to introduce a separate luxury line of
vehicles. Created in 1986 and known as Acura, the line is made up of modified
versions of Honda vehicles usually with more power and sportiness than their
Honda counterparts. The very first model was the Acura Legend, with a 2.5 liter
engine producing 151 horsepower. European luxury-car manufacturers initially
scoffed at the thought of a luxury company from Japan, with criticism coming
mostly from Mercedes-Benz.
1987 was an important year for new safety and technology at Honda. The 1987
Honda Prelude was the first passenger vehicle in the world equipped with
four-wheel steering (4WS) technology. This also marked the year for the first
Japanese car equipped with an SRS airbag, the Honda (Acura) Legend.
In 1989 Honda launched their VTEC variable valve timing system in its production
car engines, which gave improved efficiency and performance across a broader
range of engine speeds. One of the first of its kind in passenger vehicles, it
worked on the premise of tuning one engine to operate at two different
'settings' depending on load. Normal driving would use a "shorter" camshaft lobe
that resulted in more efficient operation. A more aggressive, longer duration,
cam engages when engine RPM reaches a set point resulting in more power during
hard acceleration.
In 1999 Honda began selling the Insight which is a small two-seat hybrid
vehicle. Power is derived from a combination of a 1.0L 3-cylinder gasoline
engine, and a large NiMH battery pack providing power-assist during
acceleration. This computer-controlled combination provided acceptable
performance with exceptionally low fuel consumption and emissions. Honda's
hybrid power train in now an available option for the Civic and Accord.
For the 2007 model year, Honda plans to improve the safety of its vehicles by
providing front-seat mounted side airbags, side-curtain airbags, and anti-lock
brakes as standard equipment in all automobiles available in North America
(except the Insight and S2000, which will not have side-curtain airbags). By
2008, Honda plans to have standard traction with vehicle stability control with
rollover sensors in all light trucks, which include the CR-V, Odyssey, Pilot,
and Acura MDX. Honda also plans to make its vehicles safer for pedestrians, with
more safely-designed hoods, hinges, frame constructs, and breakaway wiper
pivots.
About Honda cars: Acty
Accord
Airwave
Ascot
Ballade
Beat
Caren
City
Civic
CR-X (a.k.a. Ballade Sports CR-X or Civic CR-X)
CR-X del Sol
Civic Hybrid
Concerto
CR-V
Domani
Edix
Element
EV Plus, an electric vehicle
FCX, a fuel cell vehicle [1]
FR-V, a 6 seater
Fit
Fit Aria
Hobio
HR-V
Insight, a hybrid electric vehicle
Inspire
Integra
Jazz / Fit
Legend
Life Dunk
Logo
Mobilio
Mobilio Spike
MDX
NSX
NSX-R
Odyssey
Orthia
Partner Van
Passport
Pilot
Prelude
Honda Quintet
Ridgeline
S2000
S600
Shuttle
SM600
StepWGN
Stream
That's
Today
Vamoz
Honda Z |