Mazda Cosmo
Manufacturer | Mazda |
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Production | 1967-1995 |
Assembly | Hiroshima, Japan |
Class | Sports car |
Body style(s) | 2-door coupe |
Layout | FR layout |
There have been four generations of Mazda automobiles which went by the name of Cosmo, although they are not all particularly related. All were GT cars, with the first proving a successful launch for the Mazda Wankel engine and acting as a halo vehicle for the new Mazda brand. Later Cosmos competed in the ultra-high luxury performance market in Japan with the final JC Cosmo (1990-1995) sold as the Eunos Cosmo - Eunos was a luxury sales channel similar to Toyota's Lexus brand.
1967
Production | 1967 — 1972 1,519 series cars built |
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Engine(s) | 0810 (Series I) 0813 (Series II) |
Cosmos were built in five batches:
Date | Number | Engine | Description |
---|---|---|---|
1963 | 2 | 8A | prototype Cosmo |
1964 | 1 | 10A | Tokyo Motor Show prototype |
January 1965 | 80 | 0810 | preproduction test cars |
May 1967-July 1968 | 343 | 0810 | Series I |
July 1968-September 1972 | 1,176 | 0813 | Series II |
Racing
In 1968, Mazda went racing with the Cosmo. They selected one of the most grueling tests in Europe to prove the reliability of the rotary engine, the 84-hour Marathon de la Route at the legendary Nürburgring circuit in Germany. Two mostly-stock Cosmos were entered, along with 58 other cars. One major change to the cars' 10A engines was the addition of a novel side- and peripheral-port intake system: A butterfly valve switched from the side to the peripheral port as RPMs increased. The engines were limited to 130 PS to improve durability.The cars ran together in fourth and fifth place for most of the race, but the all-Japanese car was retired with axle damage in the 82nd hour. The other car, driven by Belgians, completed the race in fourth overall. This was to be the only racing outing for the Cosmo - the next Mazda race car would be a Familia Rotary (R100).
Series I
The Series I/L10A Cosmo was powered by a 0810 two-rotor engine with 982 cc of displacement and produced about 110 hp (thus the 110 name). It used a Hitachi 4-barrel carburetor and an odd ignition design - two spark plugs per chamber with dual distributors. A 4-speed manual transmission and 14 in wheels were standard.The front independent suspension was A-arm/coil spring design with an anti-roll bar. The rear used a live axle with a de Dion tube, trailing arms, and semi-elliptic leaf springs. Power-unassisted 10 in (254 mm) disk brakes were found in front with 7.9 in (201 mm) drum brakes in the rear. Performance in the quarter-mile (400 m) was 16.4 s, with a 115 mph (185 km/h) top speed. The price was lower than the Toyota 2000GT at 1.48 million yen (US$4,100).
Series II
The Series II/L10B was introduced in July, 1968. It had a more-powerful 128 hp (95 kW)/103 ft·lbf (140 N·m) 0813 engine, power brakes, 15 in wheels and a 5-speed manual transmission. The wheelbase had been expanded by 5.9 in (150 mm) for more room and a better ride. This Cosmo was good for over 120 mph (193 km/h) and could accelerate to cover a quarter mile (400 m) in 15.8 s.Visual changes included a larger grille under the front bumper with two additional vents to each side of this "mouth". Only 1,519 were ever made, and just six were imported into the United States. The price was up a bit to 1.48 million yen (US$4,390).
Talk show host Jay Leno owns a 1970 Series II Cosmo which was featured on the Speed Channel series My Classic Car in March, 2006. It was believed to be the only remaining Series II Cosmo in the United States.
However, Mazda's U.S. division "found another in the garage of Phoenix-area car collector Glenn Roberts and made an offer that he couldn't refuse," according to Car and Driver magazine's September 2007 issue ("A Tale of Two Rotaries").
1975 - 1981
Production | 1975 — 1981 |
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Engine(s) | 12A 13B (AP) |
Wheelbase | 98.8 in (2510 mm) |
Length | 176 in (4470.4 mm) |
Width | 66.1 in (1679 mm) |
Curb weight | 1120 kg (2469 lb) |
Related | Mazda RX-4 Mazda RX-5 |
Mazda America used the Mazda Cosmo name and offered it from 1976 through 1978. The CD Cosmo/RX-5 series was a flop internationally as Mazda tried too hard to "americanize" the car. It was however an enormous success in Japan where over 55,000 where sold in the first year alone. Due to its poor sales as an export, the series-II version from 79-81 was not exported and remained on domestic sale only.
The Cosmo was Mazda's 'large' compact rotary coupe and based on the Mazda RX-4 floorpan and mechanics, but slightly heavier due to body design and more luxurious appointments, including a 5-link rear suspension and rear disc brakes. It was available with the 12A and 13B engines.
A piston engine version, the Cosmo 1800, used a 1769 cc (80x88 mm) straight-4 SOHC engine that produced 100 hp (75 kW) and 110 lb·ft (149 N·m).
See www.MazdaCosmo.com - For more information on this model.
1981 - 1989
Production | 1981 — 1989 |
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Body style(s) | Coupé Hardtop Sedan |
Engine(s) | VC 1.8l SOHC I4 MA 2.0l SOHC I4 FE 2.0l SOHC I4 12A 12A Turbo 13B-RESI S2 2.2l Diesel I4 |
Related | Mazda Luce Mazda 929 |
Mazda offered three different rotary engines for the HB series. A 12A-SPI, 12A-turbo and 13B-RESI. The latter available with automatic transmission only. The 1982 12A-turbo Cosmo coupe was officially the fastest production car in Japan until being overtaken by the FJ20ET powered R30 Skyline RS.
The HB Cosmo & Luce were sold in Japan only, with the 929 being the export version (which was not available with the rotary engine options). While the sister models (the Luce & 929) were replaced in 1986, the Cosmo variant remained in production at a trickle until 1989.
1990 - 1995
Also called | Eunos Cosmo |
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Production | 1990 — 1995 |
Engine(s) | 13B-REW 20B-REW |
Wheelbase | 2750 mm (108 in) |
Length | 4815 mm (190 in) |
Width | 1795 mm (71 in) |
Curb weight | 1570 kg (3461 lb) |
Two engines were available, the twin turbo 13B-REW and the 20B-REW. The triple rotor 20B had 2 Litres(1962 cc) of displacement, making it the largest capacity rotary offered for sale by Mazda. It produced 300 hp (224 kW) and 300 ft·lbf (402 N·m) with twin turbochargers. The JC series Cosmo set several firsts in Automotive history. Its 13B-REW and 20B-REW engines were the first series production twin sequential turbo systems to be offered for sale. The better known FD RX-7 didn't receive its 13B-REW engine until early 1992. Plus was the first production car in the world to get a GPS option & the first in Japan to use the "Palmnet" serial data comms system for ECU-to-ECAT operation.
This 4th generation Cosmo was way ahead of its time electronically as well by being offered with Car Control System, a CRT colour touch-screen controlling climate control, mobile phone, GPS car navigation, NTSC TV, radio and CD-Player.
The Cosmo was speed limited to 180 km/h to suit Japanese regulations, but the 20B-REW version was capable of 255 km/h if given a free run . With over 380 Nm of torque available at just 1800 rpm, the Cosmo could launch from standstill to freeway speeds quickly; however, this came at the expense of heavy fuel consumption. The JC Cosmo was expensive even by today's standards, as Mazda still has not matched the sales price of this car some 18 years later for anything else in its range.
The Cosmo was manufactured from February 1990 until September 1995, and gathered a total of 8,875 sales. A split of 60/40 sales between 13B-REW and 20B-REW variants made the triple rotor 20B-REW version a rare car. Although the Cosmo remained a Japanese market-only vehicle (export had been proposed originally under the Eunos sales channel or the defunct USA-only Amati sales channel. ), the Cosmo has found its way to RHD countries such as Australia, New Zealand, Norway & the UK thanks to limited import regulations for private importers from these countries.
Dimensions:
- Wheelbase: 2750 mm (108.3 in)
- Front Track: 1520 mm (59.8 in)
- Rear Track: 1510 mm (59.4 in)
- Length: 4815 mm (189.6 in)
- Width: 1795 mm (70.7 in)
- Weight: 1570 kg (3461 lb)
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