Mazda RX-VISION Rotary Sports Car Concept

A70TTR

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 9, 2017
Threads
8
Messages
2,727
Reaction score
10,053
Location
Japan/EU/USA
Car(s)
ST205 GT4, JZA70, JZA70 TT-R, S210 Athlete
figured we might see something soon; they are far more serious about bringing the RX line back versus anything Honda or Nissan is doing.
Sponsored

 

tfoxyr

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 28, 2016
Threads
1
Messages
251
Reaction score
320
Location
matrix
Car(s)
suzuki swift sport
Meanwhile rx-8 is one really exciting car in my opinion , so i am excited to see what mazda has in store for us , generally it is a company that i trust like toyota. I hope will see something!!!
 

vb22

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 7, 2017
Threads
6
Messages
1,816
Reaction score
2,517
Location
USA
Car(s)
SC300
I do like the RX Vision concept, but it doesn't really scream RX too me. Looks more like a Aston Martin IMO. I hope the final version gets a little more FD styling cues.
 

gymratter

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 29, 2014
Threads
15
Messages
1,048
Reaction score
1,179
Location
TX
Car(s)
Silver Spur & F-150
Mazda is not bring back anything:

"Mazda CEO Masamichi Kogai confirmed that the company has no plans to build a sports car larger than the Miata, effectively dashing hopes for the RX-9"

As for Mitsubishi... where have you been if not planet earth? They stopped existing last year. Nissan bought them up and they haven't made a new evo in 10 years, and stopped production of the current one some time ago. Not to mention their car sales are non existent outside Japan.

"Nissan Motor said on Thursday it had completed a deal to take a controlling stake in Mitsubishi Motors, and would be retaining the embattled automaker’s chief executive to ensure its recovery from a mileage cheating scandal."
something is happening ;)

http://www.motortrend.com/news/possible-mazda-rx-9-mule-caught-testing/
 

vb22

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 7, 2017
Threads
6
Messages
1,816
Reaction score
2,517
Location
USA
Car(s)
SC300
Around the 10:50 mark you can see the Mazda RX mule and Z4 for a few seconds.

 

vb22

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 7, 2017
Threads
6
Messages
1,816
Reaction score
2,517
Location
USA
Car(s)
SC300
Kenichi Yamamoto, Father of Mazda’s Rotary Engine, Is Dead at 95

30yamamoto-obit2-popup.jpg


Kenichi Yamamoto, who led the engineering team that produced a commercially viable rotary engine at the company now known as Mazda Motor Company and later became its president and chairman, died on Dec. 20 in Kanagawa Prefecture, near Tokyo. He was 95.

His death was confirmed by Mazda, which was called Toyo Kogyo until 1984.

Mr. Yamamoto, a slim and intense mechanical engineer, began his career working in a Toyo Kogyo factory after World War II, but he soon shifted to engine design, which accelerated his rise in management.

Around 1961, Toyo Kogyo’s president asked Mr. Yamamoto to supervise a group of engineers who were trying to perfect the rotary engine that had been invented by a German engineer, Felix Wankel. With few moving parts, the rotary was a compact alternative to conventional engines, with their reciprocating pistons, connecting rods and crankshafts.

The rotary represented opportunity and risk for Toyo Kogyo. Like other small Japanese automobile manufacturers, the company was under pressure from the country’s powerful Ministry of International Trade and Industry to merge with larger companies to increase their overseas competitiveness. If the rotary engine succeeeded, it would allow Toyo Kogyo to maintain its independence.

“We had to show we were different; we had to show our distinctiveness,” Mr. Yamamoto told The New York Times in 1985.

His team produced a successful engine: The prototype of a stylish rotary-powered coupe called the Cosmo made its debut at the Tokyo Motor Show in 1963. Mr. Yamamoto patiently talked about the Cosmo to visitors and then drove the car across Japan with Toyo Kogyo’s president over two weeks.

“This was no mere publicity stunt,” Automotive News wrote in 1995. “Toyo Kogyo’s existence was at stake.”

30yamamoto-cosmo-master675.jpg

A 1967 Mazda Cosmo Sport, powered by a rotary engine developed by Kenichi Yamamoto and his team.CreditMazda Motor Corporation

Rotary engines were mass produced and featured in the company’s sporty compacts, but they had a significant flaw: poor fuel economy, which became a liability when energy crises struck in the early 1970s. Sales dropped, and the company was close to bankruptcy.

In 1974, Mr. Yamamoto became the head of Toyo Kogyo’s project to find fuel-saving innovations; he was adamant that the company could not abandon a breakthrough technology that set it apart from its competitors.

“It would have announced to the world that what we had started doing was not good,” he told The Times. “And then we wouldn’t have been able to succeed at anything — even just selling the piston engine.”

The engine overhaul worked. The engine’s fuel economy rose significantly. And sales of the rotary-powered Mazda RX-7 model soared.

But while the rotary engines remained the hallmark of the company’s innovation, the fuel shocks of the 1970s led it to rely increasingly on piston-engine vehicles, like the GLC.

Mr. Yamamoto was born in Japan on Sept. 16, 1922, in Kumamoto Prefecture, on the southwestern island of Kyushu, and later moved with his family to Hiroshima, where Mazda has long had its headquarters. He graduated with a mechanical engineering degree from what was then called Tokyo Imperial University (now the University of Tokyo) and served in the Japanese Navy.

The detonation of the first atomic bomb by the United States over Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945, killed Mr. Yamamoto’s sister and destroyed the family’s home. But his parents were still alive. He returned to Hiroshima and was hired by Toyo Kogyo to work at a plant outside the city that made transmissions for its three-wheeled trucks.

It was grimy work, but it allowed him to explore the engineering challenges of making transmissions. One day, he found blueprints of the transmissions “and he began to check their tolerances, acting as his own quality control,” according to the website Japanese Nostalgic Car.

His diligence and inquisitiveness placed him on a path to management.

Don Sherman, a longtime automotive journalist, remembered Mr. Yamamoto as warm and candid. “He’d greet you like a long-lost friend,” he said in a phone interview. “And he’d ask you basic questions, like: ‘What should Mazda do? Where should Mazda go?’ ”

30yamamoto-engine-jumbo.jpg

A rotary engine Mr. Yamamoto and his team developed in the 1960s. CreditMazda Motor Corporation

As head of research and development, Mr. Yamamoto listened to a suggestion in 1978 from Bob Hall, who was then working for Autoweek magazine, that the company build an inexpensive two-seat roadster. Mr. Hall made his pitch, but the idea did not advance for three years, until he was working for Mazda as a product planner in Southern California and Mr. Yamamoto saw him on a visit there.

“With a glimmer in his eye,” Mr. Hall said in a 2005 article in Automobile magazine, “he turned and said, ‘Hey Bob, what about your lightweight sports car? Why don’t you study that!’ ”

In 1985, after Mr. Yamamoto became president, he recommended that the company’s board approve production of the car: the MX-5 Miata, which proved to be immensely popular.

One of Mr. Yamamoto’s other priorities as president was to expand Mazda’s presence in the United States by building an assembly plant in Flat Rock, Mich. At the groundbreaking, in 1985, he acknowledged the difficulty of bringing a Japanese production system to the Midwest.

“We recognized that the guiding principles to which we have long subscribed in operating our company will be put to a real test here at Flat Rock,” he said.

The factory became a symbol of Mazda’s continuing partnership with the Ford Motor Company, which bought 50 percent of the plant in 1992, augmenting its existing 25 percent stake in Mazda.

Mr. Yamamoto stepped down that year after five years as chairman. Mazda’s last mass-produced rotary-engine car was the 2012 RX-8.

Information on his survivors was not immediately available.

In 2003, Mr. Yamamoto reminisced about pioneering the rotary engine, which went on to power 1.8 million Mazda vehicles.

“I am proud to be an engineer,” he wrote, adding that he was happy to have helped develop an engine that “symbolized the magnificent union of technology and romance that took place in the latter half of the century.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/29/...amoto-dead-father-of-mazda-rotary-engine.html
 

Captain_Kirk

Well-Known Member
First Name
Kirk
Joined
Sep 19, 2017
Threads
23
Messages
1,375
Reaction score
2,255
Location
US
Car(s)
?
What will happen! The new Mazda "RX-9" where the new type of sports car is equipped

Since the production of RX - 8 in June 2012, the car equipped with a rotary engine as a new car has disappeared from the domestic market in Japan. In such circumstances, a sports car equipped with a new rotary engine that frequently reports on this site. Believing in the information that "development is progressing within Mazda," I'm telling you progress as many times as possible.

 I would like to organize and deliver the development situation of such a car equipped with a rotary engine at the present time based on the information grasped up to now.

Initially it was "engine for power generation" but changed to sports specification

 In December 2017, the appearance of one test car running on the German · Nürburgring was caught, making the inside and outside of the industry turbulent. That is the test car of the RX - 8 in the picture below (I understand that Mazda occupied the course on the shooting day).

View attachment 4847
A photograph taken by a scoop photographer in December of last year and called a big topic domestically and abroad. The RX-8 test vehicle was repeating running on the Nürburgring

 A roll bar is stretched in the interior of the car which is visible in the back of the windshield, and sensors specific to the test car can be seen.

 Applying this information to Mazda stakeholders showed that it is a preceding development car of the new type "RX - 9" that draws on the trend of the rotary sports concept "RX - VISION" exhibited at the 2015 Tokyo Motor Show .

 Around 2 years ago, the rotary engine was informed both inside and outside, "to continue development as a power generation engine of the range extender". However, thereafter, there was a rebound in the direction within Mazda, and as a result of a questionnaire survey at events such as the Tokyo Motor Show, many fans found that they were longing for rotary sports cars, and continued development of rotary sports It led to.

"RX - VISION" was exhibited at the 44th Tokyo Motor Show in 2015. FR announced as FR car equipped with next-generation rotary engine "SKYACTIV-R"

 So what is the sports car with the next rotary engine?

 The power train installed is highly likely to be the next generation rotary engine "SKYACTIV - R" (Mazda is stating that this engine is being developed at the Tokyo Motor Show in 2015).

 By the way, for the car name "RX - 9", Mazda has already registered trademark registration in Japan.

 The shape of the front bumper of the test car has been changed from the normal model, and there is a difference in the shape of the air duct. Other than that, there is no big difference from the normal model such as rear, side, and wheel.

 SKYACTIV-R of the power train which is noticed is the same as RX-8 and so on while 2 rotors, the displacement volume expanded to 800 cc × 2. According to a story heard by Mazda officials about this, it seems that it is a unit that combines a supercharging system with the supercharging system, he says, "We emphasize performance rather than fuel economy". It is a high power sports specification that demonstrates the power of 400 to 450 ps, already the development of the engine alone has already been completed, and it is said that it is the stage of various performance checks after placing it on the car body (although it still takes a long time).

 Although the test cars in the above picture are still considered to be in the early stages of development, the 2019 Tokyo Motor Show will be the world premiere concept model.

 Then when is the timing of marketing? It seems that development is progressing in line with 2020 when Mazda's 100th anniversary is reached.

https://bestcarweb.jp/news/newcar/2508
 
 




Top