jgrewe
Dork
8/25/23 10:43 a.m.
The guy that introduced me to the joys of rotary racing had one of these to go with his RX3 he ran in GT3. He had "last years" race engine in it and it was his DD. This was how he described his trip into town one morning for an auto-x;
"This Corvette was crowding me on the on ramp so I let him by as soon as we got on I-75. I dropped in behind him as he took off and stayed with him up to about 90. After a mile or so I flashed my lights at him to see if he would move over, he didn't. He punched it, I punched it. I don't know how fast we were going when he finally moved over and let me pass but it was triple digits and he had a look of bewilderment as the wagon passed him."
j_tso
Dork
8/25/23 10:47 a.m.
Definitely needs a lot of work. I wouldn't modify one in better condition, but that's a blank slate.
I think it was about 2007 when I last saw an RX-3 wagon driving.
Yeah, this turns my crank...so to speak.
In reply to j_tso :
I hear you. I would love to restore it and probably keep some of the patina, but if you wanted to build something wild, this could be the perfect starting point.
jgrewe
Dork
8/25/23 11:09 a.m.
wheelsmithy (Joe-with-an-L) said:
Yeah, this turns my crank...so to speak.
I think you mean shaft...to remain true to the engine,lol.
Trim and body parts for these are hard to find and as such are exorbitantly expensive. A friend of mine bought an early RX-3 from a GRM member and told me he intends to sell it as a complete running car, but that the steering wheel alone could easily be sold for $1500. I've always wanted a pre-RX-7 rotary, but the costs and scarcity of parts has kept me away. Many of the good clean examples here in the states have been sold to Australians who are willing to pay the import costs..
I had one of those with a 4 speed. When I bought it new, Mazda had a 50K mile engine warranty. That was quite a long warranty in those days. Apex seals blew at around 51K. Mazda refused to help with engine rebuild or replacement. I had engine rebuilt by dealer and sold the car soon after that. I'm still sort of pissed after 50 years.
A couple of years after I sold the car, I received a check for $750. There had been a class action suit vs. Mazda and Mazda lost.
Having said that, it was a fun, versatile, car. I don't remember what the redline was but the car seemed to want to try to reach 10000 rpm.
PT_SHO
New Reader
8/25/23 3:29 p.m.
My bro was a huge rotary head back then (late '70's). Great success in his local autocross with a mostly stock RX3 wagon. This was when the Pirelli P-3 was the hot tire to have. His dream was to put a rotary reversed into a Karmann Ghia mid-ship but never got it done. Would have needed transmissions regularly if it used VW's would be my guess.
The RX-4's had a buzzer installed for over-rev as it was so easy to forget due to the smoothness. A friend's father had one and kept setting off the buzzer, unsure if the buzzer was at redline or slightly over it at 8000.
That is nicer than my 4 door RX-3.
IIRC, all RX-3 wagons, at least in the US, were twin dizzy. That is to say, they stopped selling the wagons here after 1973.
dannyp84 said:
Trim and body parts for these are hard to find and as such are exorbitantly expensive. A friend of mine bought an early RX-3 from a GRM member and told me he intends to sell it as a complete running car, but that the steering wheel alone could easily be sold for $1500. I've always wanted a pre-RX-7 rotary, but the costs and scarcity of parts has kept me away. Many of the good clean examples here in the states have been sold to Australians who are willing to pay the import costs..
Hell, the windshield is pure unobtainium, anywhere in the world. Literally could not place a dollar amount on it because there are none for sale anywhere. That is what really, really scared me off of the car. Break it and there is no way forward from that.