by Hans Greimel of www.autonews.com
TOKYO -- The Honda S660 mini sports roadster that went on sale in
Japan this month may never be sold in the U.S., but could presage
Honda's sports cars of the future.
The S660 is the product of a
unique development gambit meant to infuse the company's global r&d
center with youthful creativity and inculcate the next generation of
engineers in the sporty heritage Honda prides itself on.
Indeed,
the car's mastermind, 26-year-old Ryo Mukomoto, beat out hundreds of
rivals in a concept competition to be awarded leadership of the project
and became the company's youngest-ever chief engineer.
The S660 gives Honda a spiritual successor to the iconic Beat minicar
that, while never sold in the U.S., got lots of attention around the
world. The Beat pioneered the low and wide stance, open cockpit and side
air intakes that are key design features of the S660. It was produced
from 1991 to 1996 and sold only in Japan.
But Mukomoto said he
opted for a midship rear-wheel-drive layout -- unlike the Beat -- to
ensure a low front nose with "supercar proportions."
Like the Beat, the S660 is designed to meet the stringent size and engine-displacement rules of Japan's unique minicar segment.
For the rest of the artical;
http://www.autonews.com/article/20150413/OEM03/304139959/honda-sees-return-to-roots-in-s660
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