Mazda's New Straight-Six Appears In Patents; Might Power The 'RX-9'
Mazda is not like other car companies. While other manufacturers have obsessed with downsizing - a move which has backfired to an extent - it has stuck to a principle of ‘right-sizing’. Instead of making ever smaller engines with turbochargers, Mazda likes much larger, usually naturally-aspirated engines.
Now though, the Japanese firm is taking this ethos a step further, by making an engine much larger than anything it currently builds. As accidentally confirmed by a financial results report published - and subsequently removed - on its website last year, Mazda is building an all-new inline-six. And although news on that front did go quiet for some time after the initial report, the engine has now appeared in some patent drawings.
The accompanying text for the images - uncovered by Japanese publication T’s Media - seems to suggest the new straight-sixes will be scalable. “Provided is an engine exhaust structure capable of securing exhaust efficiency while reducing the size of the engine by changing the structure of an exhaust port,” they say (translated from Japanese via Google).
When Mazda originally let the six-cylinder cat out of the bag, it mentioned SkyActiv-X branding. That means the engines are set to use spark-controlled high-compression ignition for a leaner burn, and there won’t be any turbochargers. Existing inline-four SkyActiv-X engines do use a tiny pump to push extra air into the engine, which could be described as a supercharger - so whether or not the new sixes can be considered naturally-aspirated is up for debate.
The engines will be used by a new range of predominantly rear-wheel drive ‘large architecture’ cars, one of which is set to be a new Mazda 6 saloon. 48-volt mild hybrid and full plug-in hybrid options are on the agenda, as is a diesel version.
More recently, it’s been rumoured that the engine and the platform will be used for the mythical ‘RX-9’. Yep, the RX-7/RX-8 successor will use a six rather than a rotary engine, according to Jalopnik.
A patent for a new eight-speed automatic gearbox has also been filed by Mazda. While inevitably of less interest than the engine, its development is good news given that the company currently has to make do with a relatively old six-speed auto.
Comments
Maybe they are making another cosmo lmao