Hopefully this isn't a repost......I admit I don't surf the net and read all the magazines like I used to, so maybe I've missed the answer to this somewhere from the "in-the-know" crowd....With all the talk of the "new" RX8 in another thread...and even newer RX9 I keep wondering.
MAZDA used the NA 3-rotor successfull AFAIK in race applications. I don't know much about it, but assume bringing it to the street in a de-tuned state for longevity shouldn't be a huge deal. In fact, I thought that was the ultimate reason for it's developement. I also understand CAFE and CARB concerns, but it seems like those could also be engineered around. I'm SO not an expert, but maybe playing with the compression on rotors, port sizes, bigger-badder cats, hotter spark.....whatever.
EVERYONE I've ever talked to, and every write-up on the RX8 I've seen has consistently praised it's beautiful handling but then some mention is then made about the low-torque characteristics. And as I understand it any type of forced induction to cure that is either not real productive on the Renesis, or not cost effective. Maybe the RX8 guys can educate me here though too?
MAZDA used the NA 3-rotor successfull AFAIK in race applications. I don't know much about it, but assume bringing it to the street in a de-tuned state for longevity shouldn't be a huge deal. In fact, I thought that was the ultimate reason for it's developement. I also understand CAFE and CARB concerns, but it seems like those could also be engineered around. I'm SO not an expert, but maybe playing with the compression on rotors, port sizes, bigger-badder cats, hotter spark.....whatever.
EVERYONE I've ever talked to, and every write-up on the RX8 I've seen has consistently praised it's beautiful handling but then some mention is then made about the low-torque characteristics. And as I understand it any type of forced induction to cure that is either not real productive on the Renesis, or not cost effective. Maybe the RX8 guys can educate me here though too?
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