Skip to comments.
1973 Mazda RX-3 (Rotary Engine) Commercial
Reaganite Republican ^
| Reaganite Republican
Posted on 09/24/2015 9:18:05 AM PDT by Reaganite Republican
Remember this-
'Piston engine goes boing, boing, boing, boing boing, boing... but the Mazda goes hmmmmmmm.'
If you've ever driven a car with a rotary engine like a Mazda, it really is a lot of fun, very torquey and revs like crazy, always super smooth (except most from the 70s tend to backfire)- it's a shame the couldn't make them work out in a more substantial way. Besides smoothness of operation, the motor is compact, light, and simple, with only two moving parts.
But in an example of epic bad timing, Mazda launched the Wankel-engined RX series just was the first oil crisis was about to hit... when the rotary-type engine was still going through development challenges, using substantially more fuel than a comparable piston-engined car. Alas, you could get a Honda with 50% better gas milage for less money.
Worse yet was how the apex seals at the tips of the tri-rotor(s) wore-out to quickly, it was a materials issue that was not fully solved until the 1980s by Mazda. These hard-to-resolve challenges had GM, Citroen, and others pulling the plug on their own Wankel rotary engine programs (before they hit the market) in the mid 1970s as well.
In fact, not only did R+D costs/recalls almost bankrupt Mazda by 1975, but the original developer of the Wankel engine -Germany's NSU- was itself wrecked by trials and tribulations involving the company's way-ahead-of-its-time Ro80 and it's troublesome rotary engine (partial engine rebuild required every 10K miles to replace apex seals!).
 |
NSU Ro80 |
I used to know a guy who had a cherry NSU Ro80 in California, but even he had replaced the original NSU engine with a Mazda rotary in the name of more power, dependability, and access to parts. If you look at the (front-wheel-drive) Ro80, it's pretty hard to believe the car came out in 1967, the styling is 10-15 years ahead of it's time... clean, aerodynamic, great visibility.
By 1977 NSU had been broken by the Wankel rotary engine that was supposed to spring the Neckarsrulm motorcycle/auto maker into the Big Leagues, and the remains of the company was absorbed by Audi, which continues to be paid royalties on the Wankel design from Mazda to this day. And clearly new parent company Audi absorbed more than a little bit of the look for their own cars, starting with the first aero-look Audi 5000 in 1983.
If you ever have a chance to drive a rotary-engined automobile -Mazda, NSU, whatever- by all means give it a go... especially if you can find a stick shift,
like my college girlfriend's RX-7! I love 'em-
photos Aronline
TOPICS: Business/Economy; History; Science
KEYWORDS: automotive; mazda; nsu; rotary; wankel
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61-65 last
To: Allen In Texas Hill Country
Sounds like you got your share lol
To: nascarnation
They had a lot of problems with the car
It was advanced in too many ways for such a small company’s R+D to get their arms around- clutch less stick shift, fwd, the rotary motor...
The guy knew who had one with a Mazda motor transplant said it was pretty solid once he did that
To: nascarnation
Yeah that’s right- the emissions were another thing
To: Reaganite Republican
‘Got a Porsche 901 sales brochure also. They got sued by Peugeot for using a zero in the model’s middle number; hence, the 911.
64
posted on
09/25/2015 2:25:26 PM PDT
by
Does so
(Dem's Plan: Biden, 1 term, Michelle for the 2nd...==8-O)
To: Reaganite Republican
I recall graphite lube. I don’t recall the battery cell size. If you use a common search engine it is the one which comes up for ‘8201-600 model engine.’
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61-65 last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson