Mitsubishi Silver Pigeon


The Mitsubishi Silver Pigeon is a series of scooters made in Japan by Mitsubishi between 1946 and 1963. The first was the C-10, based on a scooter imported from the United States by Koujiro Maruyama, which began production at the Nagoya Machinery Works of Mitsubishi Heavy Industries. Along with the Mizushima three-wheeler pickup truck it represented Mitsubishi's first contributions to the Japanese post-war personal transport boom. The Silver Pigeon's primary competitor was the Fuji Rabbit. Motor scooters were so important to the post-war vehicle industry that In May 1948 both a Silver Pigeon and a Rabbit were presented to the Emperor of Japan. The :ja:自動車技術会|Society of Automotive Engineers of Japan lists the Silver Pigeon C-10 model introduced in 1946 as one of their 240 Landmarks of Japanese Automotive Technology.
The Silver Pigeon proved sufficiently successful to remain in production for almost twenty years. Motor Cyclist magazine voted it "best in styling" for three consecutive years in the 1950s, a decade after its introduction, while from 1950 to 1964 it maintained an average 45 percent share of the domestic scooter market. American retailer Montgomery Ward imported the Silver Pigeon and sold it via their catalog under the Riverside captive import brand. By the time production came to an end in 1963 over 463,000 had been manufactured, with the 1960 C-200 proving the most popular individual model, with almost 38,000 sales.
YearModelSpecification
1946C-10NE10 112 cc, 1.5 PS
1948C-11
1950C-25
1953C-26
1955C-57192 cc single-cylinder engine
1955C-70125 cc two-stroke
1957C-90200 cc
1958C-93210 cc
1960C-111210 cc four-stroke
1960C-200125 cc two-stroke
1960C-300125 cc two-stroke
1960C-76192 cc four-stroke
1960C-110175 cc
1960C-300125 cc two-stroke single-cylinder engine
1961C-110175 cc four-stroke, 8.3 hp
1963C-140125 cc two-stroke twin cylinder engine, 8 hp, three-speed transmission, 143 kg
1963C-240143 cc two-stroke twin cylinder engine, 9.2 hp, three-speed transmission, 143 kg