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The NH series of Honda scooters was sold worldwide beginning in 1983, in 50, 80, 90, 100 and 125cc versions. All models have an air-cooled two-stroke engine with CDI ignition. All models except the Lead 50 have leading link front suspension, electric and kick start, and a fuel gauge. The Lead 50 has a traditional telescopic fork front suspension and only electric start. All models have drum brakes and CVT transmission.
Manufacturer | Honda |
---|---|
Also called | Aero, Lead, Vision, Mascot, Kinetic Honda ZX , Y2K , DX |
Predecessor | for Aries Hozier |
Class | Scooter |
Engine | air-cooled, two-stroke |
Ignition type | electric start |
Brakes | Front drum / Rear drum |
Models
edit- Aero (USA, 1983–85)
- Lead (Outside USA, 1983–87)
- Vision (Outside USA, 1987–94)
- Mascot (Canada)
American regulations in 1986 required any motorcycle over 50cc to be four stroke to combat air pollution.[citation needed]
Engine sizes
edit- NH 50 (49cc)
- NH 80 (79cc)
- NH 90 (89cc)
- NH 100 (96cc)
- NH 125 (124cc)
- NH 150 (149cc)
There is also a more modern Lead in 100cc, 110cc and 125cc versions.
Regional variations
editThere were other regional variations as well as going by a different name in the USA. Most notably, the headlights were different on the early European models. The front handlebar moulding was later changed to be common across all models, allowing the same headlights to be used. Although the specific light arrangements still vary because of the regulations in different countries (indicators in different locations) Stickers, badges and mirrors are also different across regional versions.
Honda Dio
editManufactured by Honda Motorcycle and Scooter India, Honda Dio is a 110cc scooter introduced in 2001 in India and exported with the same brand name to 11 countries including Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Mexico and Columbia.[1] It has a 110cc, 4 stroke, air cooled engine and has both electric start and kick start.[2] Its tank can hold 6 litres of petrol with 1 litre in reserve.[3] India Today magazine named Honda Dio as the 4th most selling Scooter in June 2021.[4] Honda India introduced Dio Repsol, a sporty looking scooter introduced to celebrate 800 victories in MotoGP.[5]
Other manufacturers
editDuring the 1980s, Honda invested in non-Japanese motorcycle manufacturing – most notably they bought a large percentage of French company Peugeot, which resulted in Peugeot Motocycles. Elsewhere, the Kinetic Motor Company from India, which resulted in Kinetic Honda. Both of these joint ventures saw the NH series given various degrees of cosmetic overhaul and released as a number of different models. Peugeot released the SC series (SC 50, SC 50L, SC 80L and SX 80L) whilst Kinetic Honda released the EX, DX, ZX (100cc, 2-stroke), the ZX Zoom (110cc, 2-stroke) and the 4S model (113.5cc, 4-stroke).
References
edit- ^ Singh, Varun (May 7, 2019). "Honda Dio crosses 30 lakh sales milestone since launch in 2002". India Today. Retrieved 2021-09-05.
- ^ "Honda Dio Price, Features & Specs". Honda Nepal. Retrieved 2021-09-05.
- ^ "Honda Dio Price in Sri Lanka". Car Price Lanka. Retrieved 2021-09-05.
- ^ Singh, Varun (July 28, 2021). "Top 5 selling scooters in June 2021: Honda Activa, TVS Jupiter, Suzuki Access 125, Honda Dio, Hero Pleasure+". India Today. Retrieved 2021-09-05.
- ^ "DIO Repsol Edition". www.honda2wheelersindia.com. Retrieved 2021-09-05.
- Sources
- Coggins, Frank W. (September 1984), "Slick Scooters for Two-Wheel Transport", Popular Mechanics, vol. 161, no. 9, pp. 74–75, 137–138, ISSN 0032-4558, retrieved 2010-06-23
- Davis, Ted (12 September 1987), "Honda, Yamaha have scooters, but must build market Makers concentrating on 50 cc range", Toronto Star, Toronto, Ontario, p. K.7
- Koblenz, Jay (August 1984), "Sleek scooters", Popular Science, vol. 225, no. 2, Bonnier Corporation, pp. 96–98, ISSN 0161-7370, retrieved 2010-06-23
- Shattuck, Colin; Peterson, Eric (2005), Scooters: Red Eyes, Whitewalls and Blue Smoke, Speck Press, p. 39, ISBN 0-9725776-3-7, retrieved 2010-06-23
External links
edit- Media related to Honda NH series at Wikimedia Commons