Over the years Honda registered a lot of wins in the Grand Prix races but it wasn't until 1983 that they didn't win their first 500cc Grand Prix World Championship with Freddie Spencer. They did not win anything until 1961 when Mike Hailwood won the first Grand Prix ever for Honda in the 125 and 250 cc classes. In 1959, five Honda bikes entered the Isle of Man TT race (very prestigious at that time). Honda also played a big role in motorsports and they began their racing activities in 1954 when Honda Racing Corporation (HRC) was founded. The first Honda bike to be available in Europe was the 250cc C72 Dream in 1959. The same year, 1958, came the C100 Super Cub which became the world's most successful motorcycle because it was cheap and practical. The same model was altered in 1958 by fitting it with an electric starter and renaming it C71. In 1953 they made the J-Type Benly, in 1954 the 200cc scooter Juno, and in 1957 Honda introduced their first twin-cylinder bike, the legendary 250cc OHC four-stroke C70 Dream. One year later, they made the F-Type, which had a 50cc two-stroke engine which took over the two-wheeler Japanese market producing 6,500 units per month.
It produced around 3 horse and had a full 98cc.Īfter this came their first big seller, the 146cc, OHV, four-stroke E-Type Dream which reached a production capacity of 130 units per day by October 1951. To make everybody happy, the first bike under the Honda brand was released in 1949 and was called Dream D-Type. Some don't consider this a full-fledged motorcycle because the company was not founded yet. In their early days, Honda produced scooters and motorcycles and their first model was the A-Type, in 1947. So, ten years later, in 1948 Honda Motor was officially founded. At first he tried to sell the design to Toyota but they declined, which determined him to start his own company. Honda was founded by Soichiro Honda, a mechanic who managed to develop his own design for piston rings back in 1938.