Honda Cub F

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. The Society of Automotive Engineers of Japan (in Japanese), includes the 1952 Honda Cub F as one of their 240 Landmarks of Japanese Automotive Technology.[1]

Honda Cub F
The Honda Cub F engine, introduced in 1952, mounted on a bicycle at the Toyota Automobile Museum in October, 2005.
ManufacturerHonda Motor Company
Also calledType F [1]
Production1952-1954
SuccessorHonda Cub
ClassMotorized bicycle power unit
Engine50 cc (3.1 cu in) air-cooled, two-stroke
single-cylinder [2]
Bore / stroke40 mm × 39.8 mm (1.57 in × 1.57 in) [1]
Top speed35 km/h (22 mph) [2]
Power1 hp (0.75 kW) @ 3,600 rpm [2][3]
Torque0.20 kg⋅m (2.0 N⋅m; 1.4 lbf⋅ft) @ 3,000 rpm [2]
Ignition typeMagneto [1]
TransmissionVariable 1-speed [1]
Weight7 kg (15 lb) (without bicycle) [3] (dry)
Fuel capacity3.2 L (0.70 imp gal; 0.85 US gal) [1]

This product was a formative success for the new company, establishing their first nationwide independent dealer network. Managing director Takeo Fujisawa initiated a direct-mail campaign to the country's 50,000 bicycle dealers, generating about 30,000 replies, from which 13,000 dealers were chosen.[1][3] He also instigated a hire-purchase scheme to allow customers to spread payments across 12 months. Honda shipped 6,000 Cub F units in October 1952, and 9,000 in December.[4]

Production ceased in 1954, with the company citing consumer demand shifting to better products as Japan's postwar economy improved, and quality problems with the bicycle components that Honda had no control over.[5]

References

  1. "Honda Cub F". 240 Landmarks of Japanese Automotive Technology. Society of Automotive Engineers of Japan, Inc. Retrieved 12 August 2013. Honda's establishment of dealerships was also unique, and explosive sales of this motorcycle were achieved by sending the direct mailings to 55,000 bicycle shops all over Japan, thereby expanding the sales network in a single stroke.
  2. "Honda Collection Hall page". Honda. Archived from the original on 2005-03-11. Retrieved 2008-02-21.
  3. Brown, Roland (1991), Honda: the complete story, Crowood, p. 1718, ISBN 1-85223-544-6
  4. "Initial success". Honda. Retrieved 2008-02-21.
  5. "Production ceases". Honda. Retrieved 2008-02-21.
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