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Mazda’s Rotary Turns 40

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What is it about anniversaries that always draw our attention, well, mine, anyway? Considering all the news releases that cross TheCarConnection.com’s threshold each day, I might have ignored one from Mazda had it not noted that today marks the 40th anniversary of the Japanese automaker’s first production rotary vehicle. In the decades since, the automaker has continued rolling out the unusual, high-power alternative to the piston engine – nearly 2 million and counting – which is currently offered in the sporty RX-8 model, here in the U.S.

Now, to be more precise, one could date the so-called Wankel engine all the way back to 1919, when the then-17-year-old Felix Wankel first dreamed up the idea. And we mean dream. The idea came to him in the middle of the night, and the next day, he vaguely recalled telling friends in slumberland that, “my car has a new type of engine: a half-turbine half-reciprocated engine. I invented it!” Actually, it took the young engineer another 38 years to make his midnight vision a functional reality.

Unlike a conventional, internal combustion engine, the rotary has no reciprocating pistons. Inside the engine block, shaped a bit like a figure eight, is a triangular rotor. It operates much like a regular four-stroke engine, with the standard intake, compression, combustion, and exhaust functions – all while rotating, motion turned into amazingly smooth driving force.

When Wankel and the German company, NSU, produced the first effective prototype – in 1957, exactly a half-century ago, since we’re tracking anniversaries – almost 100 different companies lined up for licenses. That included manufacturers as diverse as the American automakers, General Motors and American Motors – which originally designed the bizarre Pacer to house a rotary. Unfortunately, the upcoming energy shocks effectively killed off those efforts, but we’re getting ahead of ourselves.

Mazda was even more committed to the rotary concept, debuting the R16A, a mid-engine sports car concept, in 1965, and then launching production of the Cosmo Sport, with a 110-horsepower twin-rotor, on May 30, 1967. Within a short time, the maverick manufacturer was hoping, the Wankel would become its primary powerplant.

My own experience with rotary power dates back to 1973, when I convinced my family to cough up the down payment on a brand-new Mazda RX-2. It was distinctive looking and fast as I could hope for, a real alternative to the muscle cars most of my friends owned down the Jersey Shore. Only a college professor’s BMW 2002tii could give me a real run for the money.

Mazda might have made it big but for several issues. There was the first energy crisis which revealed that while phenomenally powerful, rotaries offered mediocre mileage, at best. Worse, my own RX-2 spent more time in the shop than it did running. Bad dealers didn’t help, but it turned out the early seals at the tips, or rotor corners, usually failed catastrophically. Intriguingly and inadvertently, that provided a platform for one of the great names in quality and customer satisfaction. The first to uncover the unexpected technical problem was the then-young J. David Power. He parlayed that research into the California-based research empire that still bears his name.

My own situation ended far less fortuitously. After repeated failures, I finally scrapped my RX-2 as a total loss. But I remained fascinated by the technology. After nearly going broke, a chastised Mazda discovered new and far more reliable seals, the ones used in the RX-8 today. Current rotary designs also make more power and deliver better mileage. And Mazda is even developing a version that could run on clean-burning hydrogen.

So, party on, rotary engine, and Happy Anniversary.

Celebrate with Mazda over at their rotary Web site

7 Responses to “Mazda’s Rotary Turns 40”

Bob Clemens

May 30th, 2007 - 1:02 pm

A friend allowed me to drive a Gen II RX-7 and it was fast but smooth almost to the point of not having a real kick you could feel. Late he got rid of it because the seals became a problem. Maybe now, or even then, wankels are not any more prone to problems but because they will always be “different”, they will lack acceptance.

mazbee

May 30th, 2007 - 8:22 pm

Seems that Mazda will now conquer the market of rotary-engine powered vehicles since they are the only one left that sells that kind. At 40 years, it is still amazing that rotary engine is still thriving despite the modern engine concepts that has been applied to engine parts like Mazda engine mount- http://www.automotivemazparts.com/mazda-engine-mount/ -Cheers anyway!

rwinters

May 30th, 2007 - 10:16 pm

I bought a brand new RX-2 in 72. I think it cost me about $3000. Soon after the purchase in Oregon, my wife and I made a trip to visit my parents in Texas. There were no dealers between Portland and El Paso but I can tell you that everytime we filled up the attendant insisted I pop the hood so they could take a look.

When the car had about 38,000 miles on it the engine seized up. I thought that with only a 24 month 24,000 mile warranty I was in trouble. In fact, Mazda replaced the entire engine only charging me for fluids. I kept that car until it had about 75,000 miles on it. I have never owned another Mazda but that was a fun car to drive. I don’t think the car and suspension were up to the power of the engine.

fred drayton

May 30th, 2007 - 11:48 pm

I would like to say how much I enjoy your site…but seeing the Mazda / rotary article, I wonder if you are aware of the Aussie ‘REVETEC’ engine?
Have a look at:
http://www.revetec.com
and see what may well be the future - and this is a VERY different engine - lighter weight, better milage, much more power!
I would like to hear your reaction.
Regards, Fred Drayton.

AF_H1VLTG3

May 31st, 2007 - 2:31 am

I’m proud owner of a 1988 T2 (FC3S S4) and nothing beats the dedication Mazda has put into these engines. I can wait to see how the hydrogen rotary unfolds.

JD

Frank Markus

May 31st, 2007 - 9:39 am

Thanks for the fun history lesson. Who knew about the JDPower connection!? My favorite Wankel memory was performing the instrumented test of an original Cosmo belonging to Jim Downing, of Kudzu Racing for a Pat Bedard-penned story at Car and Driver (June ‘93, p 103). Heady revs, no torque, loads of fun. Zero-60 in 8.8 seconds, quarter in 16.9 at 86 mph. Fairly good numbers for 1967. I keep a 1:43 model of that white Cosmo on my desk to this day…

John Flood

June 9th, 2007 - 5:22 pm

It was the last brand new car I ever bought for under 3 grand - an RX-3. It was a blast owning that. I remember the high end speed I could get from it. And the hmmmmmm…

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