Results 1 to 6 of 6

Thread: SOICHIRO HONDA Biography

  1. #1
    3Geez Veteran lostforawhile's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2002
    Vehicle
    86 hatchback, 1990 Lincoln Towncar
    Location
    nowhere GA
    Posts
    15,401

    SOICHIRO HONDA Biography

    I found this on the web and I thought I would archive it here.

    Born: November 17, 1906
    Iwata-gun, Japan
    Died: August 5, 1991
    Tokyo, Japan
    Japanese businessman

    An independent person in a country not known for its willingness to accept nonconformists (those that do not cooperate with customs), Soichiro Honda created an automobile giant despite the opposition of the Japanese government. One of his company's cars, the Accord, was a best-selling model in the American market.
    Early life

    The first son of blacksmith Gihei Honda and his wife Mika, Soichiro Honda was born on November 17, 1906, in rural Iwata-gun, Japan. In 1922 he graduated from the Futamata Senior Elementary School. Honda had little tolerance for formal education and jumped at every opportunity he had to work with his true love: motors. Throughout his life Honda never forgot the impression that was made on him when he sighted his first automobile.

    After leaving school Honda began his career as an apprentice (a person who works to gain experience in a trade) auto repairman for Arto Shokai in Tokyo. In 1928 he returned to his hometown as a master mechanic and soon established a branch shop for the firm in Hamamatsu, Japan.
    Building an empire

    During this time Honda also participated in auto races and became interested in cars and motorcycles. Soon he was experimenting with engines, and in 1928 he organized the Tohai Seiki Company to manufacture piston rings, some of which were sold to Toyota, a major Japanese car manufacturer.

    Honda's first attempts at the personal motor business came in the mid-1940s when he designed and manufactured a small engine that could be attached to a bicycle to create a motorbike. The venture proved a great success.

    Encouraged by his early success, in 1948 he organized the Honda Motor Company. The following year Honda manufactured a small motorcycle called the "Dream D" and prepared to enter the highly competitive Japanese market, which he did through effective advertising. Within a decade Honda was the leading motorcycle manufacturer in the world and had a larger share of the American motorcycle market than Toyota and Nissan (with its Datsun cars) had in automobiles.

    Now Soichiro Honda attracted press attention, and, unlike most Japanese businessmen, he loved it. A small but talkative man, he was the opposite of what westerners imagined Japanese businessmen to be. For example, he promoted executives on the basis of performance rather than age, an unusual practice at large Japanese firms. Honda continued racing autos and motorcycles, dressed casually, and took pride in maintaining his independence from the Japanese business establishment. In addition, Honda openly voiced his admiration of American business practices and way of life.
    Automobiles

    This was at a time when the powerful Ministry of Trade and Industry (MITI) was

    Soichiro Honda. Reproduced by permission of AP/Wide World Photos.
    Soichiro Honda.
    Reproduced by permission of
    AP/Wide World Photos
    .
    trying to unite several small companies into a third large one to compete with Toyota and Nissan. MITI and the Department of Transportation tried to discourage Honda from adding to the number of companies, but he persisted. He won MITI's permission by coming out with a low-priced small sportscar, the S 500, which was different from anything produced by the other companies. He followed it up with other sports models. His company was still very small, producing only three thousand cars in 1966—half of what Toyota was turning out in a week.

    Honda introduced the Civic to the American market in 1972. It got thirty-nine miles per gallon (mpg) on the road and twenty-seven mpg in city driving, remarkably efficient for an automobile. The popularity of the Civic rose throughout the 1970s, and in 1980 Honda sold 375,000 cars in the American market—almost three times as many as Subaru and twice as many as Mazda, but still behind Toyota and Nissan. The reasons for this success were obvious: Honda combined high quality with efficiency and economy. But his small cars still appealed to a limited market.
    Transforming Honda

    In the late 1970s and early 1980s Honda expanded his car company overseas. In 1979 he opened a motorcycle plant near Columbus, Ohio, and an auto plant followed soon after, prompting other Japanese companies to follow his lead. In the late 1970s Toyota and Nissan sold one-third of their cars to the United States, while Honda sold half of his in that market.

    Soichiro Honda did not directly supervise these introductions or the development of overseas plants in the United States and Europe. He resigned in 1973, but stayed at the company as "supreme adviser." In 1988 he became the first Japanese carmaker to be inducted into the Automobile Hall of Fame. Honda died of liver failure August 5, 1991, in a Tokyo hospital. Honda's rise from humble beginnings to a powerful and influential businessman is one of twentieth century's most inspirational stories.
    For More Information

    Kotkin, Joel. "Mr. Iacocca, Meet Mr. Honda." Inc. (November 1986).

    Sakiya, Tetsuo. Honda Motor: The Man, the Management, and the Machines. New York: Kodansha International, 1982.

    Sanders, Sol. Honda: The Man and His Machine. Boston: Little, Brown, 1975.
    User Contributions:



  2. #2

    conozo's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Vehicle
    1988 Honda Accord DX, 250,000 Miles, Daily Driver
    Location
    Fort Wayne, Indiana
    Posts
    1,145

    Re: SOICHIRO HONDA Biography

    I would like to know what influence he had on the 3gee and what he thought of it.

    1988 Honda Accord LSDX-I

  3. #3
    3Geez Veteran lostforawhile's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2002
    Vehicle
    86 hatchback, 1990 Lincoln Towncar
    Location
    nowhere GA
    Posts
    15,401

    Re: SOICHIRO HONDA Biography

    Quote Originally Posted by conozo View Post
    I would like to know what influence he had on the 3gee and what he thought of it.
    I believe he stepped down as supreme director after the third generation, you can see the entire line change in design after he left. all the cars not just the accord

  4. #4
    3Geez Veteran
    Join Date
    Mar 2009
    Location
    WA
    Posts
    4,320

    Re: SOICHIRO HONDA Biography

    Quote Originally Posted by lostforawhile View Post
    ...you can see the entire line change in design after he left.
    That's weird, because just last night I notice how much the 4g's body (from the fenders-back) look like a 3g (not identical, similar).

  5. #5
    DX User griffonks's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Vehicle
    89 LX
    Location
    Parker, CO
    Posts
    95

    Re: SOICHIRO HONDA Biography

    Wow, what a story. I have been in Mexico and Central America some recently and always wondered why there are so few Hondas. Nissan, Toyota and some Mazda but few Hondas. Never saw one in Belize. Saw a few dealers in Mexico, but few cars.

  6. #6

    epic1400cs's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Vehicle
    1989 CA5 Aerodeck EXi 2.0 A20A4
    Location
    London, UK
    Posts
    892

    Re: SOICHIRO HONDA Biography

    Quote Originally Posted by conozo View Post
    I would like to know what influence he had on the 3gee and what he thought of it.
    I have a Japanese magazine Honda Style and in there there is an articel about 3rd gen R&D. ("The Origin of Hondaspirits, Chapter 14 - 3rd Generation Accord", Honda Style magazine October 2007 Issue, pp.46 - 54, ISBN n/a, Neko Publishing co ltd, Tokyo Japan.)

    Accoring to this article, the 3rd gen accord project has started in Autumn 1982. In 1982, Soichiro is not directly managing the company anymore as lost wrote. So he was not supervising the detail but his spirit or moral was very much in the atomosphere in the company.

    When R&D is over, after his test drive in the pre production test car (Aerodeck 3Dr) at Honda test course in Tochigi prefecture, Japan, Soichiro Honda said "I hate a car like a worm!." with laugh. It was on aerodeck, not 3rd gen ingeneral. If Soichiro said negative comment with laugh, it meant it was ok. If he didn't like it he exploded with no exception and gave you a punch Hence it was well known you must "stand 1m (3 feet) away from dad (=Soichiro)".
    <-----safe distance 1m(3ft)----->

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
This website uses cookies
We use cookies to store session information to facilitate remembering your login information, to allow you to save website preferences, to personalise content and ads, to provide social media features and to analyse our traffic. We also share information about your use of our site with our social media, advertising and analytics partners.
     
Links monetized by VigLink