The
13B is the most widely produced rotary engine. It was the basis for all future Mazda Wankel engines, and was produced for over 30 years. The 13B has no relation to the 13A. Instead, it is a lengthened version of the 12A, having thick rotors. It was a two-rotor design, with each chamber displacing so two chambers (one per rotor) would displace ; the series name reflects this value ("13" suggesting 1.3 litres), as with the 13A of the same displacement but different proportions. In the United States, the 13B was available from 1974 to 1978 and was then retired from sedans but continued in 1984–1985 RX-7 GSL-SE. It was then used from 1985 to 1992 in the RX-7 FC, in Naturally Aspirated or Turbocharged options, then once again in the RX-7 FD in a twin turbocharged form from 1992. It disappeared from the US market again in 1995, when the last US-spec RX-7s were sold. The engine was continually used in Japan from 1972's
Mazda Luce/
RX-4 through 2002's RX-7.
AP The 13B was designed with both high performance and low emissions in mind. Early vehicles using this engine used the
AP name. Applications: • 1975–1980
Mazda Cosmo AP • 1974–1977
Mazda REPU (Rotary Engine Pickup) • 1974–1977
Mazda Parkway • 1975–1977
Mazda Roadpacer • 1973–1978
Mazda RX-4 • 1975–1980
Mazda RX-5 13B-RESI A tuned
intake manifold was used in a Wankel engine for the first time with the
13B-RESI. RESI = Rotary Engine Super Injection. The so-called Dynamic Effect Intake featured a two-level intake box which derived a
supercharger-like effect from the
Helmholtz resonance of the opening and closing intake ports. The RESI engine also featured
Bosch L-Jetronic fuel injection. Output was much improved at and . Applications: • 1984–1985
Mazda HB Luce • 1984–1985
Mazda HB Cosmo • 1984–1985
Mazda FB RX-7 GSL-SE 13B-DEI Like the 12A-SIP, the second-generation RX-7 bowed with a variable-intake system. Dubbed
DEI, the engine features both the 6PI and DEI systems, as well as four-injector
electronic fuel injection. Total output is up to at 6500 rpm and at 3500 rpm. The 13B-T was turbocharged in 1986. It features the newer four-injector fuel injection of the 6PI engine, but lacks that engine's eponymous variable intake system and 6PI. Mazda went back to the 4 port intake design similar to what was used in the '74–'78 13B. In '86–'88 engines the
twin-scroll turbocharger is fed using a two-stage mechanically actuated valve, however, on '89–'91 engines a better turbo design was used with a divided manifold powering the twin-scroll configuration. For engines manufactured between '86-'88 output is rated at at 6500 rpm and at 3500 rpm. Applications: • 1986–1991
Mazda HC Luce Turbo-II, • 1986–1988
Mazda RX-7 (FC3S, S4) Turbo-II, • 1989–1991
Mazda RX-7 (FC3S, S5) Turbo-II,
13B-RE The 13B-RE from the JC Cosmo series was a similar motor to the 13B-REW but had a few key differences, namely it being endowed with the largest side ports of any later model rotary engine. Injector sizes = PRI + SEC. Approximately 5000 13B-RE optioned JC Cosmos were sold, making this engine almost as hard to source as its rarer 20B-REW big-brother. Applications: • 1990–1995
Eunos Cosmo,
13B-REW A
sequentially-turbocharged version of the 13B, the
13B-REW, became famous for its high output and low weight. The turbos were operated sequentially, with only the primary providing boost until 4,500 rpm, and the secondary additionally coming online afterwards. Notably, this was the world's first volume-production sequential turbocharger system. Output eventually reached, and may have exceeded, Japan's unofficial maximum of
DIN for the final revision used in the Series 8 Mazda RX-7. Applications: •
1992–1995 Mazda RX-7, •
1996–1998 Mazda RX-7, •
1998–2002 Mazda RX-7, ==13G/20B== In
Le Mans racing, the first three-rotor engine used in the
757 was named the
13G. The main difference between the 13G and 20B is that the 13G uses a factory peripheral intake port (used for racing) and the 20B (production vehicle) uses side intake ports. It was renamed
20B after Mazda's naming convention for the
767 in November 1987. As a three-rotor design, with each chamber displacing , three chambers (one per rotor) would displace , and so the new series name reflected this value ("20" suggesting 2.0 litres). The three-rotor
20B-REW was only used in the 1990-1995
Eunos Cosmo. It was offered in both
13B-RE and 20B-REW form. It displaced per set of three chambers (counting only one chamber per rotor) and used of boost pressure from twin sequential turbochargers to produce a claimed and . A version of the 20B known as the "R20B Renesis 3 Rotor Engine" was built by Racing Beat in the US for the
Furai concept car which was released on 27 December 2007. The engine was tuned to run powerfully on 100% ethanol (E100) fuel, produced in partnership with BP. During a
Top Gear photo shoot in 2008, a fire in the engine bay combined with a delay to inform the fire crews, the car was engulfed and the entire car destroyed. This information was withheld until made public in 2013. ==13J ==