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Used Honda Gear Sticks
All used Honda Gear Sticks listed on Breakeryard.com are tested, original (OEM) manufacturer parts and come with a 14 day money back guarantee. Breakeryard.com list cheap new OES or aftermarket car parts at discounted prices and used OEM car parts up to 80% cheaper than main dealer prices for Honda from premium breaker yards from across the UK.
About Gear Sticks
The Honda gear stick is a metal lever that attaches to the gearbox in a manual vehicle. It is usually located between the front passenger and driver seat and is on the left hand side of the driver in a UK standard vehicle and is used by the driver to change gears whilst driving. Some vehicles, particularly those in the United States, have gear sticks that are attached to the steering column.
To operate the Honda gear stick, the driver should depress the clutch pedal. This disengages the engine and enables the vehicle to change gears.
On top of the Honda gear stick is a gear knob, which has a diagram of the positions of the gears on the top of it for the driver’s convenience. For the driver to change gears he/she has to move the Honda gear stick in the relevant directions shown by the diagram. They will feel the gear engaging when the Honda gear stick pushes in to place.
Some 4 x 4s use a second Honda gear stick which engages another gearbox for off-road terrain.
Problems with the Honda gear stick may result in an inability to change gears.
Honda trivia
- The Indy 500 race in America should probably just give Honda the cup to keep because they’ve won more races than any other car manufacturer.
- As a company, Honda is responsible for the manufacturing of more than 14 million engines every single year.
- Honda’s main plant in Japan is so big that it has its own airport.
- On average, Honda produces 5 million Honda Cubs every year. In 2008, they announced the landmark of 60 million units built.
- With 5% of their revenue funnelled straight back into research and development, Honda has been responsible for groundbreaking new technologies that have seen widespread adoption across the car industry. The most famous is the notion of a practical four-wheel-drive vehicle, first seen in the Honda Accord in 1987.