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As we noted earlier in the Class of 1986
series, that year saw the ushering in of plenty of digital-age
technology and the ushering-out of plenty of stone-age technology. Case
in point: the Mazda RX-7.
Introduced for the American market in 1979, the RX-7 made prominent
use of the company's Wankel rotary engines, and that use would continue
into the second generation, the FC, introduced for the 1986 model year.
Though the size remained pretty much the same as the outgoing FB,
Mazda's stylists gave it more of a rounded, aerodynamic look patterned
after the Porsche 944.
The big change, however, happened underneath the
skin, with a switch from solid rear axle to independent rear suspension,
a switch from recirculating ball steering to rack and pinion steering,
and the now-standard four-wheel disc brakes. The famed and long-lived
13B, (re)introduced in 1984, saw an increase in horsepower to 146 in
1986 thanks in part to new multi-point fuel injection, while Mazda
simultaneously introduced the 182hp turbocharged version of the 13B,
easily identified by the hoodscoop for the turbocharged engine's
air-to-air intercooler.
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