Honda spent his early childhood helping his father, Gihei, a blacksmith, with his bicycle repair business. At the time his mother, Mika, was a weaver. At 15, without any formal education, Honda left home and headed to Tokyo to look for work. He obtained an apprenticeship at a garage in 1922, and after some vacillation over his employment, he stayed for six years, working as a car mechanic before returning home to start his own auto repair business in 1928 at the age of 22.
In 1937 Honda began producing piston rings for small engines which lead to manufacturing small engines to be used in motorcycles, and then in 1948 he started producing complete motorcycles as president of the Honda Motor Company. Honda turned the company into a billion-dollar multinational that produced the best-selling motorcycles in the world. Honda's excellent engineering and clever marketing resulted in Honda motorcycles out-selling Triumph and Harley-Davidson in their respective home markets. In 1959 Honda Motorcycles opened its first dealership in the United States.
Honda remained president until his retirement in 1973, stayed on as director, and was appointed "supreme adviser" in 1983. His legendary status was such that People magazine placed him on their "25 Most Intriguing People of the Year" list for 1980, dubbing him "the Japanese Henry Ford." In retirement Honda busied himself with work connected with the Honda Foundation. He died in 1991 from liver failure.
Soichiro Honda was born in Yamahigashi on November 17 1906. His father, Gihei Honda, was the local blacksmith but could turn his hands to most things, including dentistry when the need arose. His mother, Mika, was a weaver.
Honda's subsequent spirit of adventure and determination to explore the development of new technology had its roots in his childhood. The family was not wealthy, but Gihei Honda instilled into his children the ethic of hard work, and a love of mechanical things. Soichiro soon learned how to whet the blades of farm machinery, and how to make his own toys. A nearby rice mill was powered by a small engine, and the noise fascinated him. He would demand daily that his grandfather take him to watch it in action. At school he got the nickname 'black nose weasel', which is less derogatory in Japanese than it sounds in English, because his face was always dirty from helping his father in the forge.
Soichiro Honda's childhood days are full of examples of technical ingenuity, including using a bicycle pedal rubber to replicate his family's seal. At that time, the school handed the school report to the children but required that it will be returned with stamp of family seal so to make sure that the parent see it. The fraud was soon discovered when Honda started to make forged stamps for other children. Honda did not realise that the stamp had to be mirror imaged. His family name 本田 was symmetrical (when written vertically) so it didn't cause problem but some of other children's family names weren't.
The bicycles had another use: those that his father sold from the shop he subsequently opened helped Honda to hone his engineering skills. As he grew, the dream of the car on the country road acted like a magnetic force, drawing him ever closer towards things mechanical. In 1917 a pilot called Art Smith flew into the Wachiyama military airfield to demonstrate his biplane's aerobatic capabilities. Honda raided the family's petty cash box, 'borrowed' one of his father's bicycles and rode the 20 kilometers to a place he had never before visited. When he got there he soon realized that the price of admission, let alone a flight, was far beyond his meagre means, but after climbing a tree he watched the plane in motion, and that was enough. When Gihei Honda learned what his son had done to get to the airfield, he was more impressed with his initiative, determination and resilience than he was angry with him for taking the money and the bike.
By 1922 Honda was working in an auto shop in Tokyo called Art Shokai. Initially he had done menial tasks, but more and more he became a trusted mechanic. He worked on the racing car Art Daimler, then the famous machine born from the marriage of a Curtiss aircraft engine and an American Mitchell chassis. The need to make parts for this monster taught him things that would be invaluable later in life.
When Shinichi Sakibahara raced the car for the first time at Tsurumi, and won the Chairman's Trophy, the young man riding alongside as his mechanic was Soichiro Honda. He was 17 years old.
As customers brought in Mercedes, Lincolns and Daimlers for attention, Honda's experience grew in proportion with his ambition. Four years after that first race he started his own Art Shokai auto shop in Hamamatsu.
Yet Honda himself never sought dominance in his homeland. At a time when nationalism was at its peak, he always saw the bigger picture. "I knew that if I could succeed in the world market," he said, "then automatically it would follow that we led in the Japanese market."
Employees in the Art Shokai shop soon came to understand that sloppy workmanship and poor performance would not be tolerated, but while Honda's tool-hurling antics did not always encourage loyalty, those who stayed recognized his total determination to succeed and to establish an engineering business second to none. Also, Honda was sufficiently aware of his own managerial shortcomings. Honda Motor Co. Ltd. was established in October 1946, initially to build small capacity motorcycles to get Japanese workers mobile. Honda focused his considerable energies on the engineering side, using all the experience he had painstakingly accumulated, including time out taken to study piston ring design at Hamamatsu Tech and subsequent experimentation with a small engine-powered bicycle. He left the running of the company in the hands of Takeo Fujisawa, his most trusted friend, and urged him to look to the long-term. They complemented one another perfectly.
The first fruit of their partnership that hit the streets was that of a 98 cc two-stroke motorcycle appropriately named 'Dream'.
Several times Honda Motor Co. sailed close to the rocks in the years that followed, for both Honda and Fujisawa were gamblers who knew that expansion would only be possible with risk. Growth at one stage was unprecedented, until the purchase of state-of-the-art machinery in the early Fifties led them perilously close to bankruptcy. Honda stated that "Without Fujisawa, we would have gone bust a long time ago" while Fujisawa stated that "Without Honda, we would have never become this big". Honda claimed that he had never touched nor seen the company seal (hanko).
Later, when the Juno bike flopped and bankruptcy again beckoned, his reaction was to embark on the Tourist Trophy race program that would eventually make Honda's name as an international motorcycle manufacturer. It took him five years, but by 1959 Hondas were racing on the Isle of Man. Two years later they won the TT.
In 1963, a 1.5 litre V12, designed by Honda engineer (and future president) Tadashi Kume, was produced for Formula One.
Honda's first F1 win as entrant, constructor, and engine supplier was in 1965 (the last race for the 1.5 non-supercharged formula; the first F1 win for Goodyear tires).
In 1966, Honda entered Formula Two (1.0 litre) racing and Jack Brabham won 11 straight races, becoming the F2 champion. Meanwhile, F1's displacement limit grew to 3.0 litres; Honda produced a 400-hp V-12 engine for the revised class.
Still in 1966, Honda won the Constructor's Championships in all five motorcycle Grand Prix classes.
In 1967, John Surtees won the Italian Grand Prix Formula One race, Honda's first 3.0 litre F1 victory.
Honda had great successes in the mid to late 1980s and beginning of the 1990s supplying Williams and McLaren F1 teams.
Even at his advanced age, Soichiro and his wife Sachi both held private pilot's licences. He also enjoyed skiing, hang-gliding and ballooning at 77, and he was a highly accomplished artist. He and Fujisawa made a pact never to force their own sons to join the company. His son, Hirotoshi Honda, was the founder and former CEO of Mugen Motorsports, a tuner for Honda vehicles who also created original racing vehicles.
Soichiro Honda died on August 5, 1991 of liver failure.
[Sejarah Honda nggak terlepas dari tangan seorang Soichiro Honda, sang pendiri. Soichiro Honda ini seorang pembalap (racer), juga seorang businessman dan juga seorang manufaktur sejati.
Disamping semua itu yang paling penting adalah Soichiro Honda itu adalah seorang pemimpi (dreamer), Dia memimpikan membuat piston ring yang lebih baik.
Perusahaan kecil di Hamamatsu (sebelum lahir Honda Motor Company) berhasil membuat motor bikez.. di bulan Oktober 1946. Motornya ini menggunakan rangka sepeda… !!! Karena gasoline sangat langka waktu itu, makanya Honda mengembangkan motornya ini menggunakan turpentine (semacam minyak yang disuling dari pine tress… gampangnya bio BBM laagh red.). Namun karena mutunya nggak begitu bagus… itu motor kudu dipedal dulu baru bisa jalan.. !!!
Di bulan November 1947, Seichiro Honda mengembangkan motor bikez berkekuatan 0.5HP yang disebut A-Type dan masih menggunakan turpentine… dan motor ini dikenal sebagai “Chimney”…!!!
Barulah pada tahun 1958 Seichiro Honda mendirikan pabrikan Honda bersama dengan Takeo Fujikawa yang sangat mendukung dari sisi finansial. Bersama-sama mereka mendirikan emperium Honda.
Di tahun 1948 juga, Honda mengeluarkan motobikez dengan engine 90cc modifikasi dari type A, yang dikenal sebagai “B-Type”. Tahun 1949, Honda mengeluarkan motor “D-Type”. Oh ya neh motor bener-bener komplit sebuah motor. bukan hanya engine yang ditempelin ke rangka sepeda..
seperti sebelumnya. Mr. Honda selalu mengikuti setiap step dalam proses pembuatan motor ini dan makanya disebut D-Type karena Dreamnya mulai terwujud dan milestone ini membuat Honda semakin memproduksi motor yang lebih baik dan semakin canggih.
Setelah mengeluarkan D-Type selanjutnya Honda mengeluarkan engine 146cc, OHV, 4 stroke yang dikenal sebagai E-Type. Engine ini dapat mengeluarkan power 5.5HP dan dapat digeber sampai kecepatan 80 km/h… !!! Selanjutnya bikez dengan engine ini diproduksi, dan bisa mencapai 130 unit sehari.
Tahun 1952, Honda mengeluarkan motor “Cub” pertamanya dengan engine F-Type, 50cc, 2 stroke dan produksinya mencapai 6500 unit sebulan… atau hampir menguasai 70% market share motor di Jepang.. !!! Tahun 1953, Honda memproduksi motor 90cc, 4 stroke yang dikenal sebagai “Benly” atau yang berarti nyaman… !!! Motor ini mempunyai 3 speed gearbox, dan motor ini bisa laku terjual sebanyak 1000 unit sebulan.. !!!
Tahun 1954, Honda juga mengeluarkan scooter yaitu Juno. Juno ini diadaptasi dari Vespa yang sedang dibikin di Jepang… !!! Yaagh karena diadaptasi dari Vespa .. yagh bentuknya mirip banget… dengan Vespa.. !!! Tahun 1957, Honda mengeluarkan untuk pertama kalinya twin cylinder motorcycles, 250cc OHC, 4 stroke C70.. !!! C70 lumayan cukup canggih dimasanya… !!! Mulailah berbagai produk muncul .. seperti C71 dimana telah menerapkan electric starter pada engine 250cc… !!!
Tahun 1959, Benly 125cc juga dikeluarkan dan sanggup digeber sampai 110 km/h.. !!! Dan era keemasan Honda muncul pada bulan Juni 1958, yaitu dengan dikeluarkannya C100 Super Cub… yang disebut-sebut the most successful motorcycles… !!!
Super Cub ini dikembangkan selama 3 tahun, agar murah dan gampang dikendarai oleh siapapun. Motor ini menggunakan 50cc, OHC, 4 stroke, centrifugal clutch dengan 3 transmisi kecepatan. Motor ini sangat mudah dikendarai,.. bahkan bagi pemula sekalipun. Bentuk ini yang dikenal sebagai bebek sekarang… menjadi populer pada zamannya. Wanita pun mudah mengendarainya.. soalnya nggak perlu terhambat oleh bentuk konvensional motor yang ada tanki bensin etc… !!! Motor ini kemudian muncul berbagai versi… ada yang 50cc, 70cc dan 90cc… !!! Tahun 1959, Honda mulai mengekspor dan memasuki pasar Amerika Serikat… !!! Dan terkait dengan motor ini… pada akhir Desember 2005, motor ini sudah diproduksi sebanyak 50 juta unit…!!! Bentuknya beda-beda tipis namun engine nya.. mirip banget.. !!! Dan jumlah tersebut adalah jumlah yang sangat fantastis untuk sebuah motor… !!!]
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