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Home/The Wankel Engine | ||||||
![]() The Wankel EngineText taken from larger Wankel article at http://www.fortunecity.com/silverstone/lancia/58/classic/gm.htm Felix Wankel originated the idea of rotary engine as early as the 20's but development started as late as 1954 when he persuaded NSU, then a motorcycle maker, to fund the project. In theory, the rotary engine has a lot of fascinating advantages. Firstly, the rotors spin in one direction, unlike piston which changes direction reciprocately, thus being smoother and waste less energy. Secondly, it uses less components - a 2-rotor Wankel engine equivalent to conventional 6 cylinders, then no valves, no rocker arms, no camshaft, no crankshaft and connecting rods, it could be smaller, lighter and simpler than piston engine. Thirdly, lack of valve-gear mechanism and crankshaft leads to less vibration as well as less noise.
NSU's rotary engineDr. Wankel experimented his first rotary engine in NSU, which eliminated the imperfect eccentric movement of rotor by a revolving housing which was held by another housing. It was perfectly smooth, but too complicated to implement in economical way. Therefore at last a more compromised design, with eccentric rotor and a single fixed housing (that is the one Mazda still uses in today) was adopted. The first production rotary car was the 1963 NSU Spyder, a small car like Fiat 850 Spyder. It has a single rotor with capacity of 498cc. This was just a low volume experimental project.
However, Wankel engine attracted international attention. To raise the development budget, NSU sold the license for United States to an aircraft engine maker called Curtiss-Wright, which then sub-licensed to General Motors, Ford and other car makers.
Some information related to these two specific NSU cars and their engines:
The best page with a complete set of information about this type of engine is the
Wankel Rotary Combustion Engines
Citroën GS Birotor - another wankel that didn;t make it.
An odd one: the NSU Ro80 is listed in the book Lemons: The World's Worst Cars. Some remarks: About Felix Wankel:
Felix Wankel und der vergessene Motor - short story [German] Companies specilized in rotary engines:
RoTechniks LTD, United Kingdom
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Page Maintained By: Marc du Bois Last Updated: August 21, 2002 |