Honda L700

Honda L700
Overview
ManufacturerHonda
Also calledHonda L800
ProductionSayama Plant, Sayama, Saitama, Japan
L700: October 1965-September 1966
L800: September 1966-November 1967
Body and chassis
ClassMinivan
Body style3-door wagon
LayoutFR layout
RelatedHonda S600
Honda S800
Honda T500
Powertrain
Engine
  • 687 cc DOHC I4
  • 791 cc DOHC I4
Dimensions
Wheelbase2,245 mm (88.4 in)
Length3,690 mm (145 in)
Width1,485 mm (58.5 in)
Height1,400 mm (55 in)
Curb weight800 kg (1,764 lb) (LM700)

The L700 is a commercial station wagon from Honda. Produced for only eleven months beginning in October 1965, it shared the S600 roadster's mechanicals and used a bored out version of that car's high-tech inline-four engine. At 687 cc, the revvy DOHC engine produced 52 PS (38 kW) at 7,500 rpm with twin side-draft carburettors. Torque is 5.8 kg⋅m (57 N⋅m; 42 lb⋅ft) at 4,500 rpm.

The L700 was designed for commercial deliveries and was referred to by Honda as a light van, but it appeared as a conventional station wagon, seating five. Only a four-speed manual transmission was available, the front suspension was an independent MacPherson struts while the rear was a conventional leaf sprung live axle. Two models were built the basic LA700 and better-equipped LM700. A third version, called the Honda P700 was a small pick-up truck version, with an exposed load bay and a standard cab situated behind the engine, using the same chassis as the L700 (front engine, rear drive). It appeared a month after the L700. 12,763 L700 and 1328 P700 were built. Payload for all L and P-series models was 400 kg (882 lb).