The Tale of the 6-Cylinder Legendary Honda RC166GP Classical Racer Bike

$409.00

AwardWinner Built Tamiya 1/12 Honda Legendary RC166GP Racer +Metal Chain Set

SKU: 3453 Category:

Description

.Name: .The Tale of the 6-Cylinder Legendary Honda RC166GP Classical Racer Bike
.Kits: .Tamiya
.Scale: .1:12
.Builder: .Civic
.Status: .Built To Order / Pre-Order

Award-winner built The Tale of the 6-Cylinder Legendary RC166 with top building quality. Add on 1 Tamiya metal detail set with PE brass parts included in the kit. Super outstanding details throughout the whole model and very high standard accuracy on every individual part. Rebuilt some parts and more add-on details. Brilliant paint and decal job with realistic weathering finish and more.

RC166 Features:
★ Detailed high-quality 1/12 assembly model kit with top building quality.
★ Add on 1 Tamiya metal chain set.
★ Length: 166mm; Width: 43mm.
★ Brass Photo-etched parts for brake drum air ducts; cowling snaps; and chain sliders as well as metal transfers for rivets are included.
★ Superior details throughout the whole model and very high standard accuracy on every individual part.
★ Curved lines of cowlings accurately reproduced helps reproduce the bike`s sleek form.
★ Underside cowling parts can be easily attached/removed thanks to the built-in magnets.
★ Grips are made from elastomer masterfully depicted.
★ Accelerator; clutch; and brake wires are depicted with vinyl tubing.
★ The air-cooled inline 6-cylinder engine features cooling fins which provide a great scale realism。
★ Seat is made from elastomer and features a realistic surface texture.
★ Rivets are reproduced with metal transfers.
★ Metal front forks achieve a realistic finish.
★ Highly detailed flat metal-plated rims to achieve a realistic finish.
★ ABS resin wheels feature 0.4mm dia. metal-plated spokes and are assembled with 9 kinds of flat metal-plated parts.
★ Solid rubber tires with realistic tread patterns included.
★ Aluminum-turned steps fixed to the frame with 1.2mm screws have enough strength to hold the model in use with the racing stand.
★ Brilliant livery with high-quality decals and pad-printed markings and sponsor logos provided an authentic race feel.

Tamiya RC166 Add On Detail-Up Metal and PE Set:
1/12 Honda RC166 Metal Chain Set #12633
★The chain is assembled with stainless rollers; pins; and photo-etched chain links.
★Metallic texture and realistic sag effect provide greater realism.
★Resin sprocket also included.

Airbrushed and painted. Buffing and sanding to remove mold seam. Base color with primer and putty for better surface detail. Wash to enhance the surface detail increase the appearance of depth including engine; bolt head and more. Brushing to emphasize and highlighting texture with an edge. Polish chrome parts and polish all glossy body parts for realistic effects. Exhaust pipe burned multicolor representing. Add grease; staining; and dirt on-chain; brake; disc; engine; bolt head and more on real-life weathering. Beautiful decals and markings. Three coats of shining paintwork and apply three layers of clear coat and more on real live finishing.

Markings are included to depict the No.16 & No.8 and No.1 & No.7 bikes from the 1966 and 1967 Isle of Man TT Races respectively ridden by Hailwood you can choose.

Tamiya has 4 detail upgrade sets; you can choose any detail set combination to add on or remove to lower your cost; check our store or contact us for detail.

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Honda’s RC166 Had More than Met the Eye.

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. 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. 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.

In only 250cc Honda managed to squeeze in six tiny cylinders; four cams; and 24 valves the size of pencil erasers. 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 conjunction with a seven speed gearbox; it propelled the RC166’s tiny frame to a top speed of well over 150 MPH. The quality of construction and engineering needed to achieve such amazing complexity and miniaturization is simply mind-boggling; especially considering it came from an age when designers relied on slide rules and drafting tables—the age of computer-aided design was still well over a decade away.

With a crankshaft made of 13 separate components; each no larger than a domino; it was said to be so delicate that it could easily be deformed by hand; yet held up to the astronomical forces exerted upon it when spinning 333 times per second and twisting out the equivalent power of an average Japanese family car of the day. This was only made possible by the use of incredibly precise construction jigs that allowed the crank to be assembled with the kind of accuracy normally reserved for achieving space flight. Ludovic Surcin; designer of the jigs; likened the task to balancing thirteen billiard balls on top of each other and then making sure they stay put.

The engine had effectively no flywheel to speak of; and could rev from idle to past redline with one blip of the throttle; destroying the whole thing in the process. To minimize flex and maximize inertial efficiency; camshafts were barrel shaped; concentrating their mass at the center—this meant that each valve’s geometry varied wildly from one cylinder to the next; with different lobe shapes for each one. Many oil passages are as narrow as half a millimeter; unseen except through the use of x-rays. How they kept the thing running with simple hand tools rather than lasers and microrobotics is a mystery for the ages.

This is the type of engineering excellence that once defined Honda; back in the day when Soichiro was still at the helm of a company he saw as his own personal design playground; before market share and MPG dictated corporate strategy. It’s the Honda whose first-ever car was an F1 machine with a gem-like 1.5 liter V12; whose first road car used an all roller-bearing engine and independent chain drive to the rear wheels; whose use of double wishbone suspension in inexpensive hatchbacks and economy cars made them the first choice among several generations of young enthusiasts. It’s the Honda we miss like an old friend; the one we hope to see again someday soon.

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