![]() In conjunction with a seven speed gearbox, it propelled the RC166’s tiny frame to a top speed of well over 150 MPH. Fed by six diminutive carburetors, it revved to nearly 20,000 RPM and made 65 HP-extrapolated over two liters, that makes for a 48 cylinder, 192 valve, 32 cam, 520 HP motor. ![]() In only 250cc Honda managed to squeeze in six tiny cylinders, four cams, and 24 valves the size of pencil erasers. The RC166 would still be a legend today if its only accolades were for competition success and sheer physical beauty, but there’s much, much more to it than that-beneath its delicately shaped fairing and iconic livery there’s a hidden universe of miniature mechanical magic. With GP racing great Mike Hailwood in the saddle of the incredible RC166, Honda easily secured that year’s rider’s and constructor’s titles, an accomplishment he repeated in 1967. ![]() Perfection, one hundred percent, ten out of ten-that’s what utter domination looks like, and it also happens to be Honda’s 1966 250cc motorcycle World Championship Series record. ![]()
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