Mazda signed up as a licensee for Wankel’s rotary technology in 1961, and soon got to grips with the main issues (having spent $50m on development).
As well as the exotic Cosmo and RX-7, the technology was rolled out in more ordinary-looking models: the 1968-’73 R100 coupé, and the RX-2, 3 and 4 coupés and saloons of 1970-’78 to name just a few.
Today, these early Japanese rotaries are rare jewels that enjoy a cult following in New Zealand and Australia.
Interest is growing fast in Britain, too, aided by rotary specialist Silver Fern Performance of Holywell, North Wales.
The Silver Fern team of (left-right) Sam Reynolds, Lisa Kennedy, Bailey Aislabie, Dwayne Aislabie and Harry Johnson
Founder Dwayne Aislabie is from New Zealand, but came here 25 years ago.
Dwayne was Toyota-trained in his home country then worked in Group B motorsport, creating a hairy, rotary-engined Ford Escort for his boss at Toyota.
He set up Silver Fern in 2014, initially making rotary engines for a French company that built replica Group B RX-7s.
“We were in Deeside, then when COVID-19 hit we moved to Holywell,” he explains. “The interest in the old rotary stuff is increasing.