If necessity was the mother of the first ATV,
Honda engineer Osamu Takeuchi was
its father. In 1967, American Honda asked Honda R&D Ltd. for a new product
dealers could sell when motorcycle sales cooled off in the winter. Mr. Takeuchi
was assigned to lead the project, along with a small group of Honda engineers.
This was clearly the group for the job, since Takeuchi and company had been working
to develop other new recreational vehicles that never saw production. These projects
gave Takeuchi the tools to develop Honda's first ATV, the US90.
Forget the proverbial blank sheet of paper. Takeuchi started in the shop with
a head full of ideas and an eclectic assortment of components. Two-, three-,
four-, five- and even six-wheeled configurations were examined, but the three-wheel
concept delivered the best combination for the machine's intended mission. It
dealt with snow, mud and assorted slippery conditions a two-wheeler couldn't,
while providing more maneuverability than other configurations.
In the early stages, a Honda ST™70 motorcycle gave up its 70cc four-stroke
single-cylinder engine for the cause, along with assorted chassis parts. An extended
rear axle carried cultivator wheels designed to handle rough terrain. Two driving
wheels in the rear worked well. Cultivator tires didn't. The biggest challenge
would be finding a tire capable of getting a grip on soft, changeable terrain
such as snow, sand and mud. Two wheels, three wheels, four wheels or more? Motorcycle
tires weren't an option.
The design process quickened when American Honda sent Takeuchi an American invention
called the Amphi-Cat& that rolled on six 20-inch low-pressure, high-flotation
balloon tires. The light bulb went on. Revamping his ST70-based prototype to
accept the new low-pressure rolling stock, he went to work on his own tire design,
ending up with a 22-inch tire inflated to 2.2 psi. With the tire dilemma solved,
the 70cc engine lacked the muscle necessary to push a full-sized rider through
snow or mud. A 90cc engine running through a special dual-range four-speed gearbox
added the requisite flexibility over varied terrain.
The next phase of development was optimizing the chassis to match the new engine
and tires. Testing over rough roads, sand hills and slopes as steep as 35 degrees
gradually established chassis dimensions effective for recreational riding as
well as agricultural work. Laid out in the shape of an isosceles triangle with
the footpegs located outside the triangle to optimize control, the ATC design
was unique enough to let Takeuchi patent the arrangement.
Exhaustive testing brought other lessons to light as well. Using a thumb throttle
instead of the typical motorcycle twist grip let riders shift their weight for
optimal vehicle maneuverability while maintaining precise throttle control. A
rear differential was considered, but discarded when a live axle performed better.
Though suspension is an integral part of the modern ATV, Takeuchi's original
balloon tires soaked up rough terrain best by themselves. Exerting less pressure
on soft or sensitive terrain than the average human foot, those tires let the
vehicle go places others couldn't, leaving little or no evidence of their passing-an
advantage that looms large in hundreds of modern ATV applications.
The 1970s: The World's First ATC
Officially introduced to America in 1970, the US90 sent its 7 horsepower through
a dual-range four-speed gearbox with automatic clutch, and sold for $595. It
was renamed the ATC90 later that year as Honda trademarked the ATC name. Three
models carried that Honda ATC monogram through the 1970s. The ATC70 gave younger
riders a scaled-down version of the fat-tire experience. And by the end of the
decade, requests for more power turned the original ATC90 into the ATC110 in
1979. The ATC was as evolutionary as it was revolutionary from the beginning.
Good as the original fat tires were on snow and sand, they were vulnerable to
punctures from things such as stubble from harvested crops. The fact that those
original tires weren't repairable compounded the problem, so a fabric carcass
was added, and steel hubs replaced the first hubless wheel design in 1975. Tougher,
color-impregnated plastic fenders were added in 1975 as well.
Though it was primarily a recreational vehicle through the '70s, farmers were
beginning to see the ATC as a tool to make their lives easier. Honda engineers
followed their machines into the field, gathering data to guide the machine's
natural adaptation to a rapidly growing market. The ATC was as capable at labor
as at leisure, and America was catching on.
The 1980s: An Expanding Marketplace
Moving into the '80s, the two arenas looming largest in the ATV lexicon were
utility and racing. The popularity of utility usage was easy to understand. On
the farm, a tractor cost exponentially more to purchase and maintain, and an
ATV uses 8 percent of the fuel necessary to feed a tractor. Consequently utility
usage exploded in the 1980s and ATVs became multi-purpose machines, serving both
recreational and utility purposes. This multi-purpose usage grew from 30 percent
of total usage in 1985 to approximately 80
percent of today's ATV market.
Introduced in 1980, the ATC185 was popular among utility users. Rolling on larger,
25-inch tires that afforded improved traction, the 185 featured a five-speed
transmission with an automatic clutch, and a 180cc four-stroke single-cylinder
engine that was considerably more powerful as well. Though designed to split
its duties more or less equally between work and play, the 185 set the stage
for Honda's first purpose-built utility ATV two years later.
The 1982 ATC200E,
a.k.a. Big Red®, had more of everything necessary to get
a host of jobs done. Its 192cc engine and five-speed dual-range gearbox cranked
out more power, especially low in the rev band, to make chores such as towing,
spraying, seeding and fertilizing easier. An electric starter in addition to
the standard recoil system made starting the day as easy as pushing a button.
Dual racks and a 9.2-liter storage box made carrying tools, hay bales, fencing
and other agricultural essentials easier. A new sealed rear drum brake survived
the muddy fields and water crossings, and telescopic-fork front suspension made
a day in the saddle that much more comfortable. Big Red added a reverse gear
in 1984, and its drive chain was replaced with shaft drive for extra durability
and less maintenance.
The other major ATV theme of the '80s-racing-was being played out everywhere
from frozen lakes in the East to Western deserts to the dirt ovals of Middle
America. Racing was an essential part of Honda from its founding in 1948. Thus
it became part of ATC vocabulary as well, and the introduction of the ATC250R
in 1981 put the rest of the world on official notice that Honda was as serious
about winning on three wheels as it was on two. The world's first high-performance
two-stroke ATC adapted Honda's CR® motocross technology to the three-wheel
world with predictable results, taking hordes of unsuspecting competitors by
storm.
Running unofficially in the 1980 Baja 1000 on pre-production ATC250Rs, a group
of Honda associates surprised racing legend Mickey Thompson when they caught
and passed him pre-running for the race. Honda's first official ATC racing
participation came in the SCORE-sanctioned 1981 Parker 400 held in the Arizona
desert. Thanks
to Thompson's considerable influence, an official three-wheel class was sanctioned
in the 1981 Baja 1000. In 1984, Honda's ATC250Rs started just behind the motorcycles
rather than from the very back of the starting order, and then finished first
and second in class, putting them fourth and fifth overall. Nothing on four
wheels finished ahead of the ATCs. The three entries that did well were all
large-displacement
motorcycles, including Honda's race-winning XR™;. Honda raised the bar in
1985 with an all-new, liquid-cooled version of the 250R that cranked out 38 horsepower
and offered nearly 10 inches of suspension travel at both ends, giving it the
power to do disappearing acts ahead of other brands at race tracks across the
country.
Though it was never as successful in the desert as the more potent 250R, the
ATC200X that debuted in '83 proved that Honda four-strokes could run with the
best of them. The 200X combined a high-performance 192cc engine, five-speed
gearbox and manual, motorcycle-style clutch with long-travel suspension and
sporty chassis
geometry that was more at home ripping up race tracks than handling farm chores.
Meanwhile, back at the ranch, building ATVs to endure the stress of utility
use put Honda R&D on a steep learning curve. Approaching the mid-'80s, ATVs were
inspected, dissected and exhaustively scrutinized with more data acquisition
equipment than any other Honda product. Machines were run hour after hour, day
after day for weeks, with riders wearing 50-pound instrument packs that recorded
information on every aspect of the machine's operation. As the market's swing
toward utility continued, Honda's research made it clear that the next step in
the ATV's evolution would be another wheel. Thus Honda's first four-wheel ATV,
the TRX200, debuted in 1984.
The market responded almost immediately, making 1984 Honda's biggest sales
year for ATVs. The 370,000 units delivered in 1984 remain the high-water mark
for
Honda ATV sales, making up a full 69 percent of total ATV sales in the U.S.
that year. The upswing in utility use and the introduction of the four-wheel
TRX200
were also the beginning of the end for Takeuchi's three-wheel matrix. Four-wheelers
were considered more versatile tools by customers, and tools were what people
wanted most.
By 1986 the smart money was all on four wheels in the ATV world. The ground-breaking
Honda TRX250R made an unmatched four-wheel performance statement with a liquid-cooled
246cc two-stroke engine similar to the ATC250R's. On the utilitarian end of
the spectrum, Honda unveiled the first four-wheel-drive ATV that same year.
The FourTrax™; 350
4x4 arrived at its coming out party in grand style-lowered from a helicopter
to show all four wheels moving under their own power. Market forces were already
at work to replace three wheels with four.
In 1984, skyrocketing ATV sales led
to an increase in accidents, prompting an investigation by the Consumer Product
Safety Commission (CPSC). In 1986,
CPSC
statistics suggested that most ATV accidents were due to improper rider behavior
that ignored the distributor's warnings. No inherent flaw was found in the
three-wheel or four-wheel ATV design.
Honda's owner's manuals and product warning labels stressed the importance
of proper ATV operation to its customers. Through a national industry safety
campaign,
there was a 33 percent decline in recorded CPSC injury statistics between
1984 and 1988.
Nevertheless, on April 28, 1988, the U.S. ATV distributors entered into an
unprecedented 10-year agreement with the CPSC called the Final Consent Decree.
Under the agreement,
the ATV industry made a $100-million commitment to expand existing safety
programs. Among the many components of this agreement, free training and
training incentives
were offered to owners and purchasers of new ATVs. Additionally, distributors
would no longer market three-wheel ATVs, repurchasing any unsold three-wheel
models from dealer inventory.
Although three-wheel ATV sales were trailing
off across the board at the time, and Honda had already introduced a line
of four-wheel ATVs, the CPSC
agreement
did serve to accelerate the process.
On the eve of the '90s, Honda introduced the 1988 FourTrax 300 and FourTrax
300 4x4, the revolutionary pair of hard-working Hondas that would ultimately
become
the most versatile, most popular ATVs in history. Combining an ideal balance
of size, weight, power and capacity, the 300s sold more than 530,000 units
over the ensuing 12 years. Powered by a 282cc air-cooled four-stroke single-cylinder
engine, the FourTrax 300 sent its 20 horsepower through a five-speed transmission,
automatic clutch and maintenance-free shaft drive. An ultra-low first gear
helped
it tow up to 850 pounds. Tough steel racks let it carry up to 66 pounds
in front and 132 pounds in the rear. And if the hardest-working ATV in
America
ended up
packing tackle to your favorite bass fishing spot on Saturday morning,
nobody else had to know.
The 1990s: Workhorse Of The '90s
Throughout the 1980s, more and more people saw the ATV as a vehicle capable of getting thousands of different jobs done faster and easier. By the time the '90s rolled in, the Honda FourTrax had become an essential part of the great American toolbox. You'd be hard pressed to find a Louisiana rice farm, Washington apple orchard or Montana cattle ranch that didn't have at least one.
From copper mines to banana plantations, golf courses to pig farms, forest
reclamation projects to shopping center maintenance, nothing
on wheels
had ever been as versatile,
reliable, efficient and affordable, on the job or on the weekend,
as the Honda ATV.
Though sport models such as Honda's FourTrax 300EX and the new-for-'99
400EX are immensely popular with sport and recreational riders, industry
observers
estimate that 85 percent of ATV use in the '90s revolved around some
sort of enterprise. Mr. Takeuchi's idea had grown up, gone to work
and done
a good
job. When asked what products had the greatest impact on their farming
operations since 1967, the readers of Farm Industry News ranked the
Honda ATV right
up there
with Dekalb Biotype E Sorghum, A3127 Hybrid Soybeans and the Miller
Electric Mig Welder as a Landmark Product of the last 25 years. That's
high praise
from one of the most brutally sensible groups of people on the planet.
In America, having a FourTrax on the job makes a host of jobs more
efficient. In countries without our infrastructure, manpower and
financial resources,
the Honda ATV's reliability and efficiency handle jobs that simply
couldn't be done
before. Folks on other parts of the planet were discovering what
America had discovered a decade before, and began putting Honda ATVs
to work,
performing all manner of work that was either impossible, impractical
or both. Whereas
Honda ATVs were largely a domestic phenomenon before 1990, they're
currently working
in more than 35 different countries worldwide.
The 1995 Foreman 400 4x4 introduced the working world to the strongest,
most efficient Honda ATV yet. Powered by an innovative longitudinal
engine design
that positions the crankshaft perpendicular to its axles, the '95
Foreman's front and rear drive shafts transfer power to all four
wheels with
fewer power-robbing directional changes, fewer parts, less weight
and a lower
center of mass.
In 1997 Honda introduced the advantages of its longitudinal
power train to a broader circle of ATV users with the FourTrax Recon, a
mid-size
2WD ATV
that works hard and can scurry down a trail better than anything
in its class.
In 1998 Honda debuted its Electric Shift Program (ESP) on an all-new
450cc ATV, the Foreman ES. Combining the convenience of an automatic
with the
control of
a manual gearbox, ESP allowed Foreman ES riders to shift up or
down with push-button ease. Honda's meticulous approach means the
only
thing harder
than building
the toughest ATVs on earth is improving them. Improving the single
most popular ATV
model, the FourTrax 300 series, was a truly difficult undertaking.
Moving into the new millennium, the Rancher lineup achieved just that. Putting the compact, powerful efficiency of the 329cc longitudinal-powered drive train in an all-new chassis creates a better version of what was arguably the most versatile multipurpose ATV ever created.
Responding to a skyrocketing market's demands for even more hard-working horsepower and a true automatic transmission in an ATV with Honda innovation and durability, the 2001 Rubicon is introduced in the spring of 2000. The largest, most powerful multi-purpose Honda ATV ever is also the most innovative. Muscle from its liquid-cooled overhead-valve longitudinally mounted 500cc engine flows through an all-new, continuously variable Hondamatic transmission with enough original ideas inside to have more than 100 patents pending.
One of Honda's greatest strengths has always been its ability to create all-new products that don't fit in existing categories-such as the original US90. Honda does it again with the 2003 FourTrax Rincon to create the world's most comfortable ATV. It features taut, modern SUV styling, Honda's largest-displacement ATV engine, plus liberal use of aluminum to reduce weight. Conversely, Honda has also easily expanded a product's versatility to satisfy a broader audience, and that's the case with the 2004 FourTrax Rancher AT/FourTrax Rancher AT GPSCAPE. An all-new longitudinally mounted 397cc OHV single, SUV-influenced styling, plus a smaller, more efficient Hondamatic automatic transmission with Electronic Shift Program and, on GPSCAPE models, an integrated GPS unit, only broaden the Ranchers' appeal as the world's best all-around ATVs.