Mazda 787B
Win Le Mans and you win this
top ten list. The 787B isn’t just the only rotary powered vehicle to every win
Le Mans, it is the only Japanese vehicle to win as well. In an ironic twist to
rotary engine’s reputation for a lack of dependability and poor fuel
consumption, it was actually superior fuel economy and reliability that gave
this Mazda the win as faster competition fell by the wayside during the famed
24 hour race.
Powering this monster was a
naturally aspirated 26B four rotor engine that could 900 hp, but was de-tuned
to 700 hp for reliability. To this day the orange and green #55 787B is
regarded as one of the coolest race cars ever made, thanks to the quirky
rotary.
Mazda R100
Mazda may have not been the
first to build a passenger vehicle with a rotary engine, but the manufacturer
is best known for these internal-triangle engines. The R100 was part of Mazda’s
rotary engine expansion efforts and was the first vehicle exported to the USA
featuring this motor. Featuring 2 rotors that totaled 982 cc of displacement,
the engine produced 100 hp, thus the name R100 (R standing for rotary).
Mazda RX-8
As of now, this is the last
rotary powered vehicle sold in the USA. Lucky for us, it was a good one.
Featuring show-car like styling, the RX-8 had two demi-doors on either side
that allowed easier access to the backseats which could accommodate an adult
human, albeit a shorter one.
The 238 hp 13B RENESIS engine is
the most powerful non-turbocharged rotary engine ever installed in a production
car from the factory. With the six-speed manual it was possible to rev this
motor all the way up to 9,000 rpm. The car also handled great and delivered
maximum driver joy.
(Audi) NSU Ro 80
In 1967, NSU created a luxury
vehicle called the Ro 80. It was a four-door vehicle powered by a 995 cc
two-rotor engine that produced 113 hp. If this was not even technological
wizardry, the Ro 80 also featured front-end brake rotors and a semi-automatic three-speed
gearbox complete with a vacuum-operated clutch. There was no clutch pedal in
this car as a button was depressed on top of the gear shifter to activate the
clutch.
So where does Audi come in? In
1969 the Volkswagen Group acquired NSU, merged them with Auto Union and created
Audi. The Ro 80 would continue production until 1977.
Mazda Rotary Pickup
Yes, there was a rotary powered
pickup truck. An engine famous for having no torque was really installed in a
vehicle synonymous with needing a ton of it. Sold for a few years in Canada and
the USA mid-1970s, the Rotary Pickup was based on Mazda's compact pickup, but
with some revised styling.
Mazda Eunos Cosmo
The most powerful rotary
equipped vehicle ever offered from the factory was the Mazda Eunos Cosmo. This
was the flagship for Mazda's short lived Eunos luxury brand and could be had
with a choice of rotaries. The base engine was the same twin-turbocharged 13B
two-rotor motor found in the RX-7. But for those who wanted more power there
was a 20B twin-turbocharged three-rotor engine that produced 300 hp and 300
lb-ft of torque.
With a lot of power being
produced from the largest rotary engine ever installed in a production car,
fuel economy, as expected, was quite atrocious for the Eunos Cosmo. But hey, it
did a color touch screen which at that time would have been the cat's pajamas.
Chevrolet Aerovette XP-895
Even Chevrolet dabbled with
Rotary powered vehicles in the 1970s, but none ever made it to production.
After first building a two-rotor engine to test in the Vega compact car,
Chevrolet decided to bolt two of these engines together and create a 420 hp
four-rotor engine. The manufacturer created this monster for the Chevrolet
Aerovette XP-895; a mid-engine potential super-Corvette.
However, due to fuel crisis and
financial costs, the rotary program was scrapped at GM and the four-rotor
engine was replaced by a conventional V8 in the Aerovette. The Aerovette would
follow the four rotor a few years later and be scrapped as well.
Mazda Cosmo 110S
This is the car that started a
long history of rotary engines for Mazda. After testing several prototypes, the
first production of this little rear-wheel drive coupe began in 1967. Initially
the car received the 10A two-rotor engine that displaced 982 cc and produced
110 hp (which is why it was called the 110).
The Series II version of the
Cosmo featured an upgraded 10B rotary engine that upped power to 128 hp, but
the 110 name remained. Like Toyota 2000GT of the same era, these cars are a
rare sight today and highly sought after by collectors.
NSU Spider
Before even the Mazda Cosmo,
this is the car that started it all. The NSU Spider was the first production
car ever to be powered by a rotary engine thanks to a single 498 cc rotor that
produced 50-54 hp. Mounted in the back, the rotary engine was selected due to
its diminutive size; perfect for a tiny roadster.
The Spider itself was not a
great car and the one rotor engine proved to be unreliable. However, it did
blaze the trail that allowed every other vehicle on this list to be produced,
and that alone is worth a lot of recognition.
Mazda Rx7
The rotary engine is synonymous
with Mazda's RX lineup of cars and no other models had a longer run, was more
successful, or garnered more fans than the RX-7. First released in 1978, nearly
1,000,000 RX-7s were produced before the production was stopped in 2002,
although the model left our shores long before that thanks to emission
regulations.
Three generations of RX-7s were
made and by the time it was discontinued, power from the twin-turbocharged 13B
two rotor motor was up to a claimed 276 hp. The RX-7 was a phenomenal handling
vehicle thanks to its low weight and many consider it one of the best balanced
sports cars
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