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Mazda RX-7

Mazda RX-7 History

 
Introduction The Legend Begins A New Look Enter Efini

The Mazda RX-7 History
Introduction

Mazda RX-7
Mazda RX-7

In the 1970s the influx of Japanese cars was well under way and the Japanese cars offered here in the United States were known for being compact, reliable, and fuel efficient. While the Japanese cars overseas were similar in their traits, certain model lines also focused on performance and power. These cars that stressed more than just economy were so popular overseas that interest in them Stateside grew, and Japanese manufacturers began designing cars that would be popular in the United States as well as in their native countries. A few of the early Japanese performance cars offered here in the United States were the Toyota Celica and the long fabled Datsun 240Z. The Datsun Z cars, which remained popular throughout their history, were among the very first Japanese performance cars shipped to the United States, having arrived in 1969. Then in the early 1970s Toyota released the Celica which would combat the 240Z, and by 1976 Motor Trend magazine honored the Celica with the title of "Import Car of the Year".

In 1978 the first of the soon to be performance powerhouse Toyota Supras were offered as a high line of the famed Celica, and while it would be a few years before the Supra name was pinned on a body all its own, it was also in 1978 that the American market saw the introduction of a car that was powered by an engine never before dealt with by American automobile enthusiasts. This car was the 1979 Mazda RX-7, and while released in 1978, the car was technically considered to be a 1979 model. The general styling of this car was similar to that of the very popular 240Z and 280Z from Datsun, but unlike Datsun, or anyone else for that matter, this new RX-7 came equipped with a 1.2 liter rotary engine. This new engine type did not use a standard crankshaft and piston setup, but instead had a triangular rotor which spins on a center point, snug to the inner walls of the engine housing, moving intake and exhaust gases, as well as fuel, through the four stations of the internal combustion engine. Along with having no pistons or connection rods, it does bare an output shaft, which is similar to a crankshaft, in controlling the combustion process with its eccentric lobes.

The rotary engine also has no valves, as the intake and exhaust portions of the combustion process are controlled completely by the rotor. While the rotary engine was new to the American market, it had been in practice long enough to work out the bugs that Japanese users encountered when first introduced overseas. This relatively perfected engine was named the 12B, and was the standard engine in the first generation of the RX-7.


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