RX8Club.com

RX8Club.com (https://www.rx8club.com/)
-   RX-8 Discussion (https://www.rx8club.com/rx-8-discussion-3/)
-   -   engine size debate (https://www.rx8club.com/rx-8-discussion-3/engine-size-debate-223439/)

DJSensation 09-25-2011 10:58 AM

engine size debate
 
having trouble telling guys about the size of the engine, few guys persume is a 1.3L but on my reg docs it says 2.6L i no each rotor has cubic copasity of 1.3 x2 as 2 rotors correct ?

jasonrxeight 09-25-2011 11:18 AM

each rotor is 625cc, so two would be 1.3L, hence the 13B engine model.

DJSensation 09-25-2011 11:24 AM

ok well in uk on my reg doc its regesterd as 2.6 lol

warren(silver-roxy-8) 09-25-2011 11:27 AM

If it was 2.6, that means that you'd have a 26b, which means that you have a 4-rotor, which means that I would try to convince you to come state side so that I could....."borrow" your car :)

Chad D. 09-25-2011 11:45 AM

They most likely register it as a 2.6 for insurance reasons.

jasonrxeight 09-25-2011 12:03 PM


Originally Posted by Chad D. (Post 4086238)
They most likely register it as a 2.6 for insurance reasons.

well, if you consider firing order, its equivalent to 2.6L inline 4.

gwilliams6 09-25-2011 12:34 PM

By designating it as 2.6 in UK they can charge a higher fees. There was a RX8 club post this past year where a group of RX8 owners on the island of Crete, I think, won a year-long battle to defeat that island from raising the designation from 1.3l to 2.6l (the island wanted to raise the use fees and taxes to a higher category). The RX8 owners prevailed in court and it was correctly kept at 1.3l.

DJSensation 09-25-2011 12:46 PM

so it is 1.3 then lol i think ive got 2 rotors i got 4 plugs multi port lol
£250 road tax 04 plate 06 plate £450 thats yearly lol.

how can a 1.3l engine use so much god dam fuel then so strange

ken-x8 09-25-2011 12:55 PM


Originally Posted by DJSensation (Post 4086266)
...how can a 1.3l engine use so much god dam fuel then so strange

Probably because it has four spark plugs. Take two out and it won't use any. :)

FWIW, I had fun registering my 8 as having no cylinders. Property tax here in Virginia is by the book value of the car, so as long as they have the make and model, and a copy of KBB, they don't care about displacement.

Ken

warren(silver-roxy-8) 09-26-2011 10:13 AM


Originally Posted by DJSensation (Post 4086266)
how can a 1.3l engine use so much god dam fuel then so strange

higher rate of operation compared to a 4 stroke reciporicating piston of equal size

usnidc 09-26-2011 12:52 PM

wasn't there some controversy over how Mazda figured the rotary displacement? In a piston engine it is easy because you add up the displacement of each cylinder. some argued that in a rotary, instead of the 2 "combustion chambers" mazda calculates (the displacement of one face of the rotorx2), you actually have 6 combustions chambers (the displacement of each face of each rotor), which would give youa 3.9 liter engine. which would explain our fuel economy.

ken-x8 09-26-2011 01:01 PM


you actually have 6 combustions chambers (the displacement of each face of each rotor), which would give youa 3.9 liter engine. which would explain our fuel economy
But the rotor turns at 1/3 output shaft speed, which gets it back to 1.3 liters. You do get a power stroke every time, rather than every other time, but 2-strokes do that and AFAIK they don't multiply 2-stroke capacity by 2.

Fuel economy (or lack thereof) is explained by the shape of the combustion chamber and all the surface area involved through the strokes.

Ken

dznutzuk 09-26-2011 01:08 PM


Originally Posted by jasonrxeight (Post 4086227)
each rotor is 625cc, so two would be 1.3L, hence the 13B engine model.

625cc x 2 does not come out to 1308cc, 654cc x 2 does


Originally Posted by gwilliams6 (Post 4086259)
By designating it as 2.6 in UK they can charge a higher fees. There was a RX8 club post this past year where a group of RX8 owners on the island of Crete, I think, won a year-long battle to defeat that island from raising the designation from 1.3l to 2.6l (the island wanted to raise the use fees and taxes to a higher category). The RX8 owners prevailed in court and it was correctly kept at 1.3l.

Yup, Mazdz ELMA here in Greece won that battle, but I don't know if it holds in all of Europe. There was another guy in Cyprus with the same problem. Also when I registered my car there in Portsmouth, it indeed wrote 1.3l, problem was when I went to get the MOT, the book says 2.6l, which is wrong. Explain to them that there are 2 rotors, which are 654cc each, not 1.3l x 2. That's like saying someone who has a 2.0lx4cyl. has 8000cc...


Originally Posted by ken-x8 (Post 4086271)
Probably because it has four spark plugs. Take two out and it won't use any. :) Ken


Really? Think so? Cooooome on....

jasonrxeight 09-26-2011 01:51 PM


Originally Posted by DJSensation (Post 4086266)
so it is 1.3 then lol i think ive got 2 rotors i got 4 how can a 1.3l engine use so much god dam fuel then so strange

because its not an efficient engine. you turn more gas into heat.

Roaddemon 09-27-2011 08:21 AM


Originally Posted by jasonrxeight (Post 4087111)
because its not an efficient engine. you turn more gas into heat.

Because it produces so much hp and performance for it's displacement it is considered a very efficient engine in power to displacement ratio. For that reason I can forgive the fuel economy which is a little worse than a 265 hp piston 3x it's ci. The fun factor, comfort and handling easily make up for it. High performance engines use more gas. Some more than others. The greedy oil companies and the price at the pump are what bothers me. I hate giving into them, even filling my 90mpg scooter feels like I'm getting screwed by big oil.

jasonrxeight 09-27-2011 02:55 PM


Originally Posted by Roaddemon (Post 4087808)
Because it produces so much hp and performance for it's displacement it is considered a very efficient engine in power to displacement ratio. For that reason I can forgive the fuel economy which is a little worse than a 265 hp piston 3x it's ci. The fun factor, comfort and handling easily make up for it. High performance engines use more gas. Some more than others. The greedy oil companies and the price at the pump are what bothers me. I hate giving into them, even filling my 90mpg scooter feels like I'm getting screwed by big oil.

you cant compare displacement vs power in different engine type. say if you have a 1.3L two stroke and a 1.3L four stroke, the two stroke will make twice as much power and burns twice as much gas at maximum load (assume same efficiency), because power comes from burning gas.
now a 1.3L rotary engine is equivalent to a 2.6L inline 4 four stroke engine looking at firing order, or 1.3L inline 4 two stroke engine AT maximum load.
so really, if you talk about power/displacement efficiency it all comes down to how they use the displacement.

Roaddemon 09-27-2011 03:34 PM


Originally Posted by jasonrxeight (Post 4088212)
you cant compare displacement vs power in different engine type. say if you have a 1.3L two stroke and a 1.3L four stroke, the two stroke will make twice as much power and burns twice as much gas at maximum load (assume same efficiency), because power comes from burning gas.
now a 1.3L rotary engine is equivalent to a 2.6L inline 4 four stroke engine looking at firing order, or 1.3L inline 4 two stroke engine AT maximum load.
so really, if you talk about power/displacement efficiency it all comes down to how they use the displacement.


Please explain th 3.9 theory as posted below. Which is more correct yours or his?



some argued that in a rotary, instead of the 2 "combustion chambers" mazda calculates (the displacement of one face of the rotorx2), you actually have 6 combustions chambers (the displacement of each face of each rotor), which would give youa 3.9 liter engine. which would explain our fueleconomy.

jasonrxeight 09-27-2011 07:11 PM


Originally Posted by Roaddemon (Post 4088237)
Please explain th 3.9 theory as posted below. Which is more correct yours or his?



some argued that in a rotary, instead of the 2 "combustion chambers" mazda calculates (the displacement of one face of the rotorx2), you actually have 6 combustions chambers (the displacement of each face of each rotor), which would give youa 3.9 liter engine. which would explain our fueleconomy.

ok, the combustion chambers are 654cc per rotor right? the eccentric shaft spins three times when the rotor spins once. when rotor spins one turn, three combustion stages occurr. Which means there is one combustion stage per eccentric shaft rotation per rotor. and two combustion stages per eccentric shaft rotation for two rotors.

now, we looking at a four stroke engine. it takes a single four stroke engine two crank shaft rotations to do a combustion, so two pistons give you one combustion per rotation. now a 654cc single rotary engine combusts 654cc per eccentric shaft rotation, for a twin cylinder engine to do the same, it needs TWO 654cc combustion chambers to satisfy combusting 654cc per crank shaft rotation. that gives you 1.3L. now two 654cc rotary engine, equals two 1.3L twin engines, that gives you a 2.6L inline 4.

usnidc 09-28-2011 07:27 AM


Originally Posted by Roaddemon (Post 4088237)
Please explain th 3.9 theory as posted below. Which is more correct yours or his?



some argued that in a rotary, instead of the 2 "combustion chambers" mazda calculates (the displacement of one face of the rotorx2), you actually have 6 combustions chambers (the displacement of each face of each rotor), which would give youa 3.9 liter engine. which would explain our fueleconomy.

His is more correct as he explained above.

I threw that out as something I had seen discussed in various places a long time ago where some people were debating how to compare the rotary to other engines. the arguement was each rotor has 3 "combustion faces" so that is 6 x 650cc = 3.9L. But that doesn't go into the differences with how the rotary combustion cycle/eccentricshaft rotation works vs. a 4 stroke recip engine.

Roaddemon 09-28-2011 07:56 AM

i researched the engine a little more in regards to displacement. The displacement is 1.3 by volume but breaths like a 2.6 piston for the reasons you stated. So the rotary breaths twice as efficient as a piston engine the same displacement but also sucks more gas for the reasons stated. Insurance companies are wrong to call it a 2.6 for rate hikes. Here in wisconsin my 8 is rated as a 1.3 four cylinder familiy sedan by state farm. I love it. My insurance rates are lower than 4 banger accord I had 10 years ago. kinda makes up for the lower gas mileage.

jasonrxeight 09-28-2011 11:44 AM


Originally Posted by Roaddemon (Post 4088774)
i researched the engine a little more in regards to displacement. The displacement is 1.3 by volume but breaths like a 2.6 piston for the reasons you stated. So the rotary breaths twice as efficient as a piston engine the same displacement but also sucks more gas for the reasons stated. Insurance companies are wrong to call it a 2.6 for rate hikes. Here in wisconsin my 8 is rated as a 1.3 four cylinder familiy sedan by state farm. I love it. My insurance rates are lower than 4 banger accord I had 10 years ago. kinda makes up for the lower gas mileage.

2.6L FOUR stroke cylinder engine. two strokes breath as efficient as a rotary the same displacement.
lucky you. how come mine is listed 1.3L "sport" coupe and I am paying almost twice as much as I paid for a 3.5L four door sedan?:wallbash:
maybe cuz I totalled two motorcycles. oh well.:cuddle:

Roaddemon 09-28-2011 12:37 PM

And I have a clean record, and am an old codger.:ylsuper:

wrightcomputing 09-28-2011 01:08 PM

They do it because of the related power to a cylinder engine and for tax purposes. 1.3L cars are typically under 100 HP. So they classify the Rotary as a 2.6L so they can steal more money when the tax man comes. I agree though should be taxed as a 1.3L not our fault we bought a wankel engine.

8 Maniac 09-28-2011 01:21 PM


Originally Posted by wrightcomputing (Post 4089024)
They do it because of the related power to a cylinder engine and for tax purposes. 1.3L cars are typically under 100 HP. So they classify the Rotary as a 2.6L so they can steal more money when the tax man comes. I agree though should be taxed as a 1.3L not our fault we bought a wankel engine.

I thought these taxes were typically more based on power, emissions and fuel consumption... If that's the case, you're just mad they thought about that potential loophole lol.

wrightcomputing 09-28-2011 01:25 PM

I live in the US now so it does not affect me. Thats what my friend told me when he had one about 5 years ago. I think it helps to sell the car too. Who wants a car with a 1.3L engine? (Appart from everyone on this forum)


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 10:16 PM.


© 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands