6 Fascinating Rotary Cars - That Aren't Mazda RXs

While Mazda's famous pursuit of rotary-engined sports cars is arguably the Wankel's biggest success story, the RX-7 and RX-8 weren't the only ones to make a success of it
6 Fascinating Rotary Cars - That Aren't Mazda RXs

No one would argue that Mazda’s RX-7 and RX-8 were the most famous roqad-going cars built with rotary engines. There was also the stunningly gorgeous Mazda 787B, which is the only rotary-powered car ever to win Le Mans.

But there were a good handful of other cars that used the rotary design. Some did better than others in life, but all of them shared the spirit of blending small capacity with high specific output. Let’s take a drive down memory lane and look at some of the projects that rotary fame forgot.

Audi A1 e-tron concept

6 Fascinating Rotary Cars - That Aren't Mazda RXs

The unlikely four-ringed entry to this list is also the most recent. The A1 e-tron concept emerged in 2010 as a vision of how a future small car could be powered. It used a hybrid drivetrain based around two electric motors and an engine; in this case a 254cc Wankel – but other types of engine could be swapped in as well.

Like any range-extender it could run on electricity alone or a combination of both the engine and motors. It only weighed 1190kg even with the batteries and motors taken into account, but still wasn’t very punchy once it was moving. The 0-62mph dash took a leisurely 10.2 seconds. It did only have 60bhp always on tap; its 101bhp peak was only yours in short bursts. At least its 12-litre thimble of a fuel tank could top the car’s total theoretical range up to 155 miles.

Mazda Cosmo (HB)

Image: Wikimedia Commons/Tennen-Gas
Image: Wikimedia Commons/Tennen-Gas

The Cosmo was Mazda’s first rotary-engined car and for a long time it was the company’s flagship. Mazda kept at it until it was clear that it had run out of consumer appeal alongside the sleeker, more desirable RX-7. It was a huge shame, because the last (JC) Cosmo had become a technological powerhouse way, way ahead of its time.

It’s the HB Cosmo that tends to creep under the radar, though, being less desired than the JC or the early versions, the L10A/B and the CD. Very much a pure 1980s piece of design, the HB sported some outrageous interiors and, of course, pop-up headlights. It’s not the prettiest thing in the world but today it keeps a sweet kind of retro charm.

NSU Ro 80

Image: Wikimedia Commons/Lothar Spurzem
Image: Wikimedia Commons/Lothar Spurzem

NSU was the first Western car maker to build a rotary-powered car. That was the 1964 Spider, but we couldn’t get hold of any large enough images of it. Instead, we’re featuring a later model. The 1967 Ro 80 was a four-door saloon aimed at families in the former West Germany. The Comotor-built Wankel measured 995cc and delivered a very healthy 106bhp to the front.

NSU was gradually absorbed into Audi over the following decades, but the site it was built at, in Neckarsulm, is still used by Audi today to build the A4, A5, A6, A7 and A8. Audi Sport is also based there.

AMC Pacer

Image: Wikimedia Commons/Christopher Ziemnowicz
Image: Wikimedia Commons/Christopher Ziemnowicz

Before anyone starts furiously commenting that the Pacer didn’t actually use the rotary engine it was designed to take; we know. We’re talking about the prototype that wowed North America at a time when circumstance was just starting to push people out of their gigantic gas-guzzlers and into something a little smaller. That prototype used a rotary.

Unfortunately for AMC, the agreements it had in place for engine supply were shredded and forgotten by supplier General Motors when it became clear that the unit simply wouldn’t meet the US’s upcoming and more stringent emissions regulations. A hastily-adapted straight-six Pacer sold well at first, but its poor fuel economy let it down versus the four-cylinder cars GM and others churned out by the late ‘70s.

Citroen GS Birotor

Original images: Wikimedia Commons/order_242/Gérard Delafond
Original images: Wikimedia Commons/order_242/Gérard Delafond

The gorgeous Citroen GS spawned a rotary brother, sometimes called the GZ but usually known as the Birotor. Two Wankel rotors operated in perfect harmony to give a butter-smooth power delivery that went hand-in-hand with Citroen’s amazingly comfortable hydropneumatic suspension.

It was a terrible failure, though. Brilliant, but with a price tag to match, it cost as much as the larger DS and some 70 per cent more than a regular GS. Just as it was released, the 1970s oil crisis hit and the thirsty Birotor became about as desirable as facial warts. Just 847 were reportedly sold and Citroen effectively tried to disown the model altogether, initially refusing to supply spare parts or even acknowledge existing owners.

Chevrolet Aerovette

6 Fascinating Rotary Cars - That Aren't Mazda RXs

Regardless of what powered it, the mid-engined Aerovette was an absolute masterpiece of American design. Originally penned in the 1960s it kept a feeling of relationship to the Corvette Stingray while looking altogether faster. Experimental Project 882 (XP-882) was an on-off-on project in the latter part of the decade before 1972 saw it rejuvenated with a new four-rotor engine.

Two two-rotor Chevrolet Vega engines were joined and the car was renamed XP-895. It produced 420bhp and most likely sounded epic, but like with other rotary cars of the era, the oil crisis ruined any chances of it making production. In 1976 the Wankel was replaced with a nice, efficient 6.6-litre V8, named the Aerovette and added to 1980’s production calendar. It was then cancelled yet again after various senior GM staff retired and the company changed direction. A shame, if you ask us, although a mid-engined Chevrolet sports car is coming to the US at last.

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Comments

Anonymous

Its funny when Corvette’s has rotary engines in it

11/05/2018 - 14:05 |
176 | 4
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

I mean today we live in a world where RX-7’s are LS swapped

11/05/2018 - 14:06 |
110 | 2
Robert Gracie

My grandfather (on my mums side of my family, so her dad) had an Ro80, there were a few good stories about it

11/05/2018 - 14:09 |
6 | 0
Elliot.J99

I think ford did a rotary Mustang as a concept back in the 60’s

11/05/2018 - 14:10 |
0 | 0
French Freys

Rotary swap the LS…. oh how times were different

11/05/2018 - 14:15 |
26 | 0
Anonymous

Let’s not forget that this thing was offered with a rotary too, beside the 4 banger

11/05/2018 - 14:53 |
72 | 0
Luis Angel

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

wow I never knew that!

11/06/2018 - 01:56 |
4 | 0
nandee

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

I’ve yet to see a photo of one that actually had a rotary. I believe this to be a hoax, or only some very limited number was produced (like less than a 100 or so)

11/06/2018 - 08:25 |
4 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

  1. 140hp 13B copy
11/06/2018 - 16:26 |
2 | 0
Marco Q (hi)

Just yesterday I found a cheap Cosmo HB for sale, I need one.

11/05/2018 - 15:20 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

There was also a rotary engine option in the Lada Samara. However, only the soviet police forces could afford it.

I can only imagine how unreliable it was.

11/05/2018 - 16:00 |
8 | 0
Richard the edition 100

uh uh lada uh uh skoda 1000 mb prototypes

11/05/2018 - 16:29 |
2 | 0
doritodriftospinnyboi™

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Knew about all of them but the Pacer.

PS: my profile is actually a birotors engine

11/05/2018 - 17:06 |
0 | 0
Burnout🔰(Rotary Fighter)(SaveCT)

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Wow!I only knew about the Cosmo

11/06/2018 - 00:57 |
0 | 0
P1eased0nteatme

Citroën RE-2 is worth mentioning too despite not being a car, putting the Wankel to good use.

11/05/2018 - 18:32 |
14 | 0