I saw a rx7 like the one thats my avatar, it had its hood off and it had a v8 in it. i could tell by the air filter. post stories of rotary *Censored**Censored**Censored*s on this thread
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Originally posted by Hi-TeK fc3s
i dont like it because it adds so much weight and throws off the balance of the car totally...
i cant wait till i run into some extra money and do rotary swaps into other cars, cant beat the light-weightness and power from a 1.3 or 2.0L
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No kidding, Auspex, as much as I love Grassroots Motorsports magazine's infamous "Ro-Spit" (a MkIV Triumph Spitfire with a bridge-ported 13B) or the number of rotary powered Datsun 510's you see in Sport Compact Car, I also realize those cars are absolute PAINS to work around.
And Appleseed is right. Heck, a ton of great sports cars in the sixties and seventies were Euro-American hybrids. Here's just some of the great sports cars that used American muscle.
Facel Vega HK500 - Chrysler V8
Iso Grifo - Chevy Corvette 327.
Bizzarini 5300GT Strada - your choice of 327 or 427 Chevy
Detomaso Mangusta and Pantera - Ford 351 Cleveland
Sunbeam Tiger - Ford 260 and 289, Shelby tuned
Jensen Interceptor - Chrysler 383.
I really hope this proved my point, because do you know what a royal pain in the *Censored**Censored**Censored* it is to find a flattering picture of a Jensen Interceptor?
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Originally posted by Appleseed
Its funny how many hate on V-8 swaps. But then think that old Cobras from the 60s are cool. All Shelby did was stuff a 289 (then 427 ) in an English AC Ace.
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V8 7's are cool for drag, but pretty much anything else they are useless...and personally if i buy an RX-7, im not buying it to drag race with. At drift showoff last summer here there was a FB with a 350 in it...he could only do donuts, and finally it killed it when he spun over a rumble strip, crimped his exhaust, blew his motor, and ripped the CV joints apart all in one swift move...it was funny... and you cant tell me that a 20b with twins and performance work done would get worked by a 350.... simply cause the 20b has both lightwieght and power...its very easy to put down 800 ponies to the ground with a tri-rotor as long as you know what you are doing.
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Eh....
Even with only a 350, you can make huge power. Look at nascar motors, for example...they make about 800 horse with good durability, and they are surprisngly restricted at some points to keep the cars from being absolutely stupid fast. With an all-out build, four digits is definately obtainable without a power adder (forced induction/nitrous). More displacement would help too.
Going by the idea that what's good for the goose is good for the gander, if we apply forced induction to a 350 it's all over.
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That would be assuming that the 350 in question in fact weighed as much as a fully dressed 13B twin turbo.
Turbos are big beasts, and their associated plumbing - especially in high horsepower applications which include wastegates and intercoolers - weighs quite a bit. I would not be surprised if a turnkey naturally aspirated LS1 (which is an all aluminum engine) weighs about the same as a fully-dressed turnkey twin-turbo 13B with intercoolers and plumbing.
A lot of people like to claim that turbos are "free horsepower". No such thing. A turbo works off of the "waste product" of the engine, no doubt, but it doesn't change the fact that turbos add weight, add complexity (bad for reliability - more stuff to go wrong), place a load on the engine to work harder (turbo lag is, after all, the engine working against those impellers to get the turbo spooled).
Now, a naturally aspirated rotary engine with a good bridge-port, Racing Beat exhaust, and really good injectors/carbs is a hot beast. While tacking a twin-turbo setup onto the 13B wrecks the engine's allure by adding weight, size, and complexity, I've always had a fondness and respect for a wildcat 12A or 13B that's been ported, polished, and has a big ol Weber hanging off the side. Loud lil SOB's, and packing way more of a wallop than their size indicates.
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