Honda S800

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Honda S800
Honda S800
Honda S800
Manufacturer Honda
Production 1966–1970
Predecessor Honda S600
Successor Honda S2000
Class Sports car
Body style(s) 2-door roadster
2-door coupe
Layout FR layout
Engine(s) 791 cc I4
Related Honda L800

The S800 was a sports car from Honda. Introduced at the 1965 Tokyo Motor Show, the S800 would replace the successful Honda S600 as the company's image car.

Like the S600, it was available as either a coupe or roadster and continued the advanced technology of its predecessors. the 791 cc straight-4 engine produced 70 hp (52 kW) at 8000 rpm, pushing the car to 100 mph (160 km/h) but still allowing for 35 mpg (6.7 L/100 km).

Racing type
Racing type

Early examples continued to use the chain drive and independent suspension in the rear, but after these cars (752 roadsters and 242 coupes) were produced, Honda switched to a conventional live axle rear end with four radius rods and a Panhard rod. 604 roadsters and 69 coupes were built with this setup before disc brakes replaced the front drums.

In 1968, the S800M was introduced with flush door handles and side marker lights outside, dual-circuit brakes and lean carburetion under the hood, and safety glass. These changes were made for the American market, but the car was never imported officially. Production ended in May 1970 with 11,536 S800s produced. It would be Honda's final roadster for nearly thirty years, until the release of the S2000.

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