Skip to main content

Honda completes restoration of the first car it sold in America

Honda just completed the restoration of the first car it sold in America, and the diminutive hatchback shows just how far the Japanese automaker has come in the past few decades.

The car that led to such Honda hits as the Accord, Civic, and CR-V is a tiny N600, a model almost looks too small to be a real car. The first American Honda carries Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) 1000001, and is known as “Serial One.” Honda documented the restoration process in a 12-episode series of online videos that just wrapped up along with the restoration.

The N600 first appeared on U.S. shores in 1969. Honda had already achieved considerable success here with motorcycles, while car sales were dominated by American brands and their gas-guzzling behemoths. At 122 inches long, the N600 could actually fit within the wheelbases of many typical American cars of the time, Honda notes.

Read more: Lamborghini breathes new life into one of its very first cars

Honda’s entry into the U.S. car market also took place during the golden age of American muscle cars, when big V8s and performance ruled the day. But the N600 was about as far from a Hemi-powered Dodge Charger or Ford Mustang Boss 429 as you could get. Its 598-cc two-cylinder engine could only get the Honda to a top speed of 81 mph. It did put Honda in a good position when the 1970s oil crises took hold, though.

Almost 50 years after it was built, Serial One was discovered by Tim Mings, an N600 specialist who claims to have restored over 1,000 of the cars. He purchased Serial One sight unseen sometime ago, not knowing about its special place in Honda history. Over the past six months, Honda has documented his work on the car, which was unveiled at the Japanese Classic Car Show in Long Beach, California.

The restored Serial One N600 is an important reminder of how far Honda, and cars in general, have come in the past few decades. Will today’s Civic look just as quaint compared to the Hondas of 2066? Only time will tell.

Editors' Recommendations

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
The legacy of Sally Ride: America’s first woman in space
Sally Ride aboard the Space Shuttle Challenger.

Of all the barriers to equality that women smashed in the 1960s and 1970s, one of the most exciting was seeing women leave the Earth and join the exploration of space. No one is better known to represent this achievement than Sally Ride, a NASA astronaut who became the first American woman in space in 1983. We spoke to Jennifer Ross-Nazzal, historian at NASA's Johnson Space Center, about Ride's career at NASA and the long reach of her legacy for women in science and beyond.

NASA in the 1960s and 1970s was not a welcoming environment for women. Even though pioneering Black women like Mary Jackson and Katherine Johnson were instrumental in both getting men to the moon in the Apollo missions and demonstrating that women had valuable skills to share in spaceflight, the agency remained overwhelmingly white and male. The Astronaut Corps was even more so, being entirely staffed by white men up until 1978.

Read more
Elon Musk to hand over first Giga Berlin Tesla cars on Tuesday
elon musk teases an offbeat extra for teslas berlin factory giga

Tesla boss Elon Musk has flown to Germany to present customers with the first Model Y vehicles built at the automaker’s new Giga Berlin plant -- its first car factory in Europe.

Musk tweeted that he’ll be handing over the production cars to the new owners at a special event at the site on Tuesday, March 22.

Read more
Watch folks react to their first ride in GM Cruise’s driverless car
Two people taking their first ride in an autonomous car.

General Motors autonomous car unit, Cruise, has started to offer driverless rides to residents of San Francisco as it moves toward the launch of a full-fledged robo-taxi service.

Following a test run of the service last week, Cruise has released a video (below) showing the reaction of the very first passengers as they rode through the streets of the Californian city in a vehicle that had nobody behind the wheel.

Read more