(The following info is taken from "Honda Motorcycles" by Aaron P. Frank)
Dick Mann's official qualifying average speed was clocked at 152.82 MPH.
There were 4 factory bikes for deffinite as there were 4 riders.
There was also a private one entered (none factory) built by a guy named Woody Leone a Beaumont, Texas based Honda dealer from what I have read up on.
Did this back up bike get used after Ralf Bryans bike went up in flames ?....the book says not.
Yoshio Nakamura was given the responsibility for the Honda factory effort at Daytona. Advised by John Surtees (a former 7-time road racing champion), the riders were Ralph Bryans (World 125 GP Champ), Tommy Robb and Honda U.K. dealer and racer Bill Smith. The head of Honda R&D (Mr. Harada) contacted Bob Hansen and had him field one motorcycle under the guise of being a contingency entry, but in reality he wanted Hansen to "keep an eye on Nakamura"... Dick Mann was Hansen's choice.
As a backup plan for Ralph Bryans' bike after it caught fire and was badly incinerated by the burning magnesium cases, Hansen had supplied a Beaumont, Texas Honda dealer named Woody Leone with a CR race kit to build a privateer entry, with the agreement that if something happened to one of the factory bikes, they would have access to Leone's machine. Nakamura ignored Hansen's plan and decided to rebuild the burned bike. Hansen thought he was crazy, as in his mind a frame after being through a magnesium fire would never be 100% OK afterwards...
If I get the legend correctly, Dick Mann was a last-minute selection to ride the third back-up bike, and intuitively geared-it sky-high when he saw all the camchains breaking in practice. Then during the race his teamates broke camchains and Dick was so far out in front when HIS camchain started rattling he cruised at less than full-speed to victory.
Dick was instructed to take it easy on the bike in order to keep it together for the whole race. As the second-place Triumph entry was creeping closer and closer, Nakamura jumped over the pit wall and ordered Hansen to tell Mann to go faster. Hansen replied, "You get back over that fence and mind your own business. I'm running this race now!" These words eventually lead to Hansen's departure from Honda less than a week later...