A Rotary Engine For The 2020s Could End The Scene As We Know It

When we thought rotary engines had gone forever, it was easy to almost deify Mazda's divisive but much-loved RX-7 and RX-8, but now that the technology could realistically return in a very different way, the waters could be muddied
A Rotary Engine For The 2020s Could End The Scene As We Know It

Earlier this week we reported that Mazda might, after all, deliver a rotary-engined car again at some point in the not-too-distant future. It’s the latest in a long line of on-off developments that give us different ideas about the future of rotary power from one week to the next.

It’s been frustrating to keep reading inconclusive comments when all we want is a straight answer. The latest comments made by Mazda’s own Zoom Zoom magazine, implying that rotary tech has a future that meshes with the demands of the current age of technology and lowering emissions, hasn’t really helped.

The real problem isn’t that we don’t know whether it’s happening. The bigger issue, and the one that bothers me most of all, is what if Mazda really is working on rotary power, but in a way that’s totally different to the RX-7 and RX-8? Like a CVT-linked range-extender hybrid, or a hydrogen-sucking silence-fest. The only thing worse than never regaining something close to your heart is getting it back and finding it changed beyond all recognition.

Will rotary make its comeback in cars more like this...?
Will rotary make its comeback in cars more like this...?

We know the mythical ‘RX-9’ isn’t happening under any circumstances. The car derived from the RX-Vision concept is not viable, and that’s that. The idea of a nice, efficient, hybrid drivetrain using rotary technology’s advantages to cut weight and boost efficiency, though… that’s not going away. The question I really want to ask is whether all those people who’d give a kidney just to see a new RX warrior hero get built would be a little bit crushed when a rotary engine returned as a mild-mannered eco-warrior.

They say you should never meet your heroes. Most of us who have a big ol’ soft spot for the RX-7 or RX-8 have never owned one, if we’ve driven one at all. A new, rotary-derived drivetrain that achieved fresh heights of efficiency but that completely turned its back on those old dreams of brap-brap-brap drama might be even worse than not having a rotary at all.

This is the closest we'll get to an RX-9
This is the closest we'll get to an RX-9

At the end of the day it’s just a car, and at this stage it’s just a non-existent car. With your sensible hat on, there’s no doubt that it shouldn’t make any difference to anyone. But we car guys and girls are romantics at heart. We fall in love with the character and personalities we see in cars. We put our favourite models on pedestals in our minds and we grieve if those pedestals are ever torn down.

It might be likelier than some of us would want to admit that if we do see rotary again, it won’t be something to drool over or turn the volume up for. For some people it might be better to just remember it as it was rather than confront a cold new reality that sends those old pedestals tumbling.

Perhaps this as-yet fictional future engine we’re imagining might win millions of new fans across the world with its lightweight design, innovative approach and seamless function. But, then again, maybe it would just begin to overwrite all the old glory. Maybe it would signal the beginning of the end of rotary fandom as we know it. It’s a risk Mazda would have to take.

Comments

Griffin Mackenzie

Well nobody saw that coming

05/29/2017 - 19:54 |
0 | 0
DL🏁

“it’s just a car”

Am I on car throttle? Just reading this phrase hurts my feelings

05/29/2017 - 20:11 |
8 | 0
DL🏁

What I don’t understand is that why do they bother with eco-friendliness and efficiency at all in this case?
Ofc, there are regulations etc, but those are all about averages across the model range, aren’t they.

So if they make an RX-9 like its supposed to be but make all the family cars more efficient, it should be fine.

After all, Porsche just launched 4.0-litre naturally aspirated GT3 RS. Lamborghini launched 5.2L Perfomante and 6.5L Aventador S. Ferrari just released the upsized V12 engine for the 812 and Aston made 5.9L in the Vanquish S more powerful.

Do any of these cars emit less C02 or NOx or whatever else than a 1.3L Rotary? I doubt it.
Mazda just need to get their s**t together

05/29/2017 - 20:16 |
18 | 2

Do you have a logic deficiency, or are you seriously assuming a volume sales brand like Mazda has the same marketing strategy as companies like Ferrari or Porsche?

Even if the RX-9 was a 911/Ferrari competitor in both specs and price, who would buy it? Surely not a broke-arse car nut, and definitely not a general rich person. Nobody’s going to spend $130,000 on a Mazda, even if it’s that good…

05/30/2017 - 04:13 |
2 | 6
Ian MacDonald

For some reason I always found rotaries to be some kind cool (almost) futuristic engine type. The idea of a hydrogen + hybrid rotary sounds amazing to me.

05/29/2017 - 20:33 |
0 | 0
Ricardo Mercio

What if it comes back as a range extender in Mazda’s response to the BMW i8? I don’t think I’d be too irate about that.

05/29/2017 - 22:13 |
0 | 0
Muhammad Haqy Aunoora

I don’t know how to feel right now. What if all the things on this post become reality?

05/29/2017 - 23:47 |
0 | 0
Senator Chinchilla

If I can’t have an RX9 I’ll at least settle for the return of Mazdaspeed. :s

05/29/2017 - 23:48 |
0 | 0
NOTROX

wow i havent been in ct in a while i need to say something about the post something that helps c’mon think fast.

TOASTER

05/30/2017 - 04:43 |
0 | 0
DJ N

Even if this rotary tech is going to be for a hybrid or run silent, I’m sure some enthusiastic petrolheads will somehow make it go brap brap or combine a whole whack of them…

05/30/2017 - 05:04 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

Somehow this made me feel better about my ex

05/30/2017 - 06:50 |
0 | 0

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