We Wanted Mazda’s RX-9 So Much That We Forgot How Stupid We Were Being

After the hype had started building and the pictures hit the Internet, we genuinely started to believe Mazda might actually make the RX-9. Time for a reality check
We Wanted Mazda’s RX-9 So Much That We Forgot How Stupid We Were Being

Okay, we admit it: we really, really wanted Mazda to build a new rotary-powered sports car. The FD RX-7 was such a legend that, almost 15 years after it was killed off, we look at it with the most rose-tinted of Ray-Bans.

Despite a catalogue of faults you could list with respect to the practicalities of living with one, to its fans it can do no wrong, like that girl at school who you’d swear has dropped out of your dreams but is actually a bit of a bitch.

It’s a bug, and the FD bit us hard. Blame the Fast films if you like, but either way we go as gooey-kneed over it at least as much now as we did in the 1990s. Which probably goes some way to explaining how happy we were to give ourselves up to the goddess of future rotary perfection, Mazda’s RX Vision concept.

We Wanted Mazda’s RX-9 So Much That We Forgot How Stupid We Were Being

Its curves were feminine and powerful; shapely without being delicate. God, it was a good-looking thing. Who wouldn’t want that on their driveway? Who wouldn’t want to upgrade the exhaust (overnight parts from Japan, obvs) and listen to it brap-brap-brapping away all day long?

But no. It wasn’t to be: Mazda’s CEO took the dream away from us in an interview given to Automotive News, stating categorically not just that there won’t be a rotary-powered coupé, but that there won’t be a coupé sized above the MX-5 at all.

Given all the coverage we’d dedicated to the RX Vision, the amount of times we pictured what a production version might look like and the number of times we daydreamed about driving the damn thing, you can imagine this pretty much wrapped our bubble in barbed wire and squeezed.

We Wanted Mazda’s RX-9 So Much That We Forgot How Stupid We Were Being

After the sobbing had stopped and those too emotionally broken to carry on had been taken away in wheelbarrows, we had to set ourselves straight. The RX-9 was never going to happen and we were idiots to think it. We let our epic desire for it to be brought to life cloud our better judgement.

Rotary engines just aren’t efficient when used as the principal drive unit in a car. They can rev to silly heights and create God’s own music from an exhaust pipe, but for all their low-displacement technology they drink fuel like Barney Gumble drinks Duff. And let’s not mention the oil consumption, or the lack of low-range torque, or the service intervals.

We Wanted Mazda’s RX-9 So Much That We Forgot How Stupid We Were Being

Much as we were hoping for Mazda to have pulled a miracle solution to the design’s problems out of some recently-discovered orifice (we wouldn’t care which orifice as long as the solution worked), that sort of wizardry is beyond economical sense to even attempt. That’s why the rotaries that we now have confirmation that the Japanese are working on are specifically aimed at range-extender hybrid drivetrains. BMW i8 aside, these sorts of cars are not generally all that much fun to drive.

Cars like the ones it sounds like Mazda is developing are necessary. The RX-7 is the absolute epitome of unnecessary, but that’s why we love it so much. We wanted Mazda to give us more wrong because it always felt so right, but as of this moment we’re giving up on that and moving on. Internal combustion isn’t dead yet so we may as well enjoy pistons - and rotors - while we still can.

Comments

Anonymous

http://liquidpiston.com
Take a look, it’s in the development stages, rotary isn’t dead just yet.

12/10/2016 - 21:45 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

This artice is a waste of time, you spend way too much time complimenting and making oh faces over a non existent car, get over it lol and am I the only one that thinks that concept is hideous? Its not proportioned well and is absolutely boring to look at, sorry I’m a grouch but damn

12/10/2016 - 22:16 |
2 | 4
Anonymous

Translation: LS-swap your Mazda RX Today!!!!

12/10/2016 - 22:44 |
2 | 2
Cameron

Eh, other than the MX-5 and maybe the Mazdaspeeds, Mazda is nearly as geriatric as new age Toyota is. I think that disappointment is going to be the number one feeling car enthusiasts will have towards most cars of the future. Innovation for performance will mostly be left to electric cars and to more gadgets to make driving more uninvolved and prone to making you fall asleep. I’m sure some of you will disagree with me, but lap times and comfort aren’t the only important things to me, contrary to where new designs are going. Oh well, at least there’s still a thriving used car market!

12/10/2016 - 22:54 |
6 | 0
Anonymous

Mazda is a company driven by economical income. Mazda is not the only one knowing how to make wankels. It will return, just in a new shape.

12/10/2016 - 23:15 |
6 | 2
straight64life

Honestly, who here has driven or owned an actual rotary powered car? And not just fanboys bitching about the death of rotary powered cars despite having no experience of owning or driving one?

12/11/2016 - 01:11 |
4 | 0

I owned an RX8 for a year, it’s the best car I have owned and I was and still am depressed that I had to sell it. It handled well, it looked stunning, it sounded like a chainsaw at full throttle. Sure, it drank oil, but no worse than an old Honda, and yeah, it didn’t get great gas mileage, but it wasn’t far off from a wrx, and it did not have too much torque, but I never cared. Putting an RX8 in context with its peers, you begin to see that it is a hell of a car for how alternative it is, if I were to quantify it I would say it runs like a BRZ with the running costs of a 3 series and the fuel economy of a mustang GT.

12/12/2016 - 05:32 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

I just want a fast car from Mazda, hell a new Mazdaspeed 6 in a coupe version would be ideal for me, but nooooooope

12/11/2016 - 01:22 |
4 | 0
hoosiercub

Ok fine.. Put a SkyActiv V6 Turbo in it and make it.. Really honestly, Mazda doesn’t make anything I’d even buy, save for the Miata. They’ve killed Mazdaspeed models, no turbos, slowly but surely pinging off the three pedal gearbox. Mazda could make some seriously fun cars. They just won’t,

Even a fwd two door based on the 6 with more power and a manual transmission with a dual clutch auto option would be nice.

12/11/2016 - 02:49 |
8 | 0

The point of Mazda is normal cars with fun. Like a Ford escape with slightly better handling

12/11/2016 - 16:44 |
4 | 0
faisal3398 فيصل (Crown Vic)

They could just sell it as a crate engine

12/11/2016 - 04:00 |
4 | 0

Mazda does not have a good reputation for crate rotaries.

12/12/2016 - 05:22 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

sadly when it comes to building performance street cars, Mazda seems to not give one single rabbit s/*!t. the people running the show are narrow minded, poor visioned, lack the ability; the desire to adapt when it comes to making the one single car that would be everything Mazda.

the rx9 can single handedly fill countless voids their lineup needs filled. they would have a car to complete with the other manufacturer’s elite flagships. this one car can bring something their enthusiasts can be excited about. the cars that made people fans of Mazda are damn near classics and antiques now.

Mazda has lost sight of what made them great and have turned into a company that delivers to us soley economy innovations. they’ve betrayed themselves, their heritage, and car enthusiasts. are there any sport oriented, performance focused cars in Mazda’s lineup? when was the last time they built a car that’s
close to what an rx9 could achieve?

12/11/2016 - 06:43 |
8 | 0

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