The Mazda R100 — known in Japan as the Familia Rotary Coupe — was Mazda’s first rotary-engined coupe, produced by Toyo Kogyo Co., Ltd. from 1968 to 1973. Built on the second-generation Familia platform under the internal designation M10A, it paired the compact 10A twin-rotor Wankel engine with a lightweight coupe body. The R100 name was used primarily in export markets (North America, Australia, Europe); Japanese domestic models were badged Mazda Familia Rotary Coupe or, from 1970, Familia Presto Rotary Coupe. Total production of rotary-engined Familia models reached approximately 95,891 units.
Key Specifications
| Spec | Value |
|---|
| Production Years | 1968-1973 |
| Manufacturer | Toyo Kogyo Co., Ltd. (Mazda) |
| Assembly | Hiroshima, Japan |
| Internal Designation | Familia Rotary / M10A |
| Body Style | 2-door coupe (2+2) |
| Layout | Front engine, rear-wheel drive |
| Construction | Semi-monocoque unitary body |
| Platform | Second-generation Familia |
| Wheelbase | 2,260 mm |
| Overall Length | 3,830-3,870 mm (varies by market and model year) |
| Overall Width | 1,480 mm |
| Overall Height | 1,345 mm |
| Front Track | 1,200 mm |
| Rear Track | 1,190 mm |
| Kerb Weight | Approx. 805-865 kg (varies by market specification) |
| Dry Weight | Approx. 810 kg (JDM) |
| Fuel Tank Capacity | 43 L (JDM), up to 50 L (some export markets) |
| Boot Capacity | Not officially published |
| Drag Coefficient | Not officially published |
| Seating Capacity | 4 (2+2) |
Engine Specifications
10A (0810) Twin-Rotor Wankel
| Spec | Value |
|---|
| Type | Twin-rotor Wankel rotary |
| Designation | 10A (0810) |
| Displacement | 982 cc (2 x 491 cc per rotor chamber) |
| Rotor Housing Generating Radius | 105 mm |
| Rotor Eccentricity | 15 mm |
| Rotor Width | 56 mm |
| Compression Ratio | 9.4:1 |
| Power (JIS gross) | 100 PS (74 kW / 99 hp) @ 7,000 rpm |
| Power (SAE net, US market) | 100 hp (75 kW) @ 7,000 rpm |
| Torque | 132 Nm (13.5 kgf-m / 97 lb-ft) @ 3,500 rpm |
| Fuel System | Nikki 4-barrel carburettor (JDM and most markets) |
| Fuel System (some export) | Twin Stromberg carburettors (select markets) |
| Ignition | Points-type distributor |
| Cooling | Water-cooled |
| Lubrication | Wet sump with metered oil injection to rotor housings |
| Fuel Requirement | Premium (leaded in period; premium unleaded for modern use) |
| Redline | Approx. 7,500 rpm |
| Oil Capacity | Approx. 3.5 L (with filter) |
| Recommended Oil | 20W-50 mineral (period specification) |
| Exhaust | Single exhaust with thermal reactor (emissions-equipped markets) |
The 10A was Mazda’s first-generation production twin-rotor engine. It was also used in the Cosmo Sport (110S) in a slightly different state of tune. The R100 version was calibrated for a more accessible, broader power band than the Cosmo’s higher-revving unit. Despite its modest displacement figure, the 10A’s power output was comparable to conventional piston engines of 1,500-1,600 cc.
Rotary Engine Internal Components
| Component | Quantity (per rotor) | Notes |
|---|
| Apex Seals | 3 | Primary combustion chamber sealing element |
| Side Seals | 6 (3 per side) | Seal rotor face to side housing |
| Corner Seals | 6 (3 per side) | Seal junction of apex and side seals |
| Oil Seals | 6 (3 per side) | Control oil consumption |
| Apex Seal Springs | 3 | Maintain apex seal tension against rotor housing |
Transmission
| Spec | Value |
|---|
| Standard | 4-speed manual, fully synchronised, floor-mounted shifter |
| Optional | 3-speed automatic (Jatco), available in some markets |
| Clutch | Single dry plate, hydraulic actuation |
4-Speed Manual Gear Ratios
| Gear | Ratio |
|---|
| 1st | 3.587 |
| 2nd | 2.022 |
| 3rd | 1.414 |
| 4th | 1.000 |
| Reverse | 3.663 |
Note: Gear ratios are approximate and based on the Familia-platform 4-speed gearbox shared with early rotary Mazdas. Minor variations may exist between production years and markets.
Final Drive
| Variant | Ratio |
|---|
| Standard (manual) | 3.700 |
| Some markets / options | 4.111 |
| Automatic | 3.700 |
| Spec | Value |
|---|
| Differential Type | Hypoid bevel |
| Limited-Slip Differential | Not standard (available as aftermarket or competition fitment) |
Suspension
| Component | Front | Rear |
|---|
| Type | Independent, MacPherson strut | Live axle |
| Springs | Coil | Semi-elliptic leaf |
| Dampers | Telescopic hydraulic | Telescopic hydraulic |
| Anti-roll Bar | Yes | No |
The rear suspension used a conventional live axle located by semi-elliptic leaf springs, which was standard practice for this class of vehicle in the late 1960s. Some competition-prepared cars were fitted with coil-spring rear conversions or upgraded dampers.
Brakes
| Component | Front | Rear |
|---|
| Type | Solid disc | Drum |
| Front Disc Diameter | Approx. 244 mm (9.6 in) | |
| Rear Drum Diameter | Approx. 200 mm (7.9 in) | |
| Booster | Vacuum assisted | |
| Hydraulic Circuit | Dual-circuit | |
| ABS | Not available | |
Steering
| Spec | Value |
|---|
| Type | Recirculating ball |
| Power Assist | No (manual steering) |
| Turns Lock-to-Lock | Approx. 3.5-4.0 |
| Turning Circle | 8.2 m (approx.) |
Wheels and Tyres
| Spec | Value |
|---|
| Standard Wheels | 14 x 4.0 in pressed steel (some markets: 13 x 4.5 in) |
| Standard Tyres | 145SR14 (Dunlop SP3 or equivalent), or 155SR13 depending on market |
| Bolt Pattern | 4 x 114.3 |
| Centre Bore | 73.1 mm |
| Common Upgrade | 13 in or 14 in Minilite-style, RS Watanabe, or similar period alloys |
Wheel and tyre specifications varied between JDM, Australian, North American, and European models. The most commonly documented factory fitment is 14-inch steel wheels with 145SR14 radial tyres.
| Measure | Value |
|---|
| 0-60 mph (0-97 km/h) | Approx. 10.8 seconds |
| 0-100 km/h | Approx. 11.0-11.5 seconds |
| Standing Quarter Mile | Approx. 16.4-17.5 seconds |
| Top Speed | Approx. 177-180 km/h (110-112 mph) |
Performance figures varied between road tests and market specifications. The lightweight body and free-revving rotary gave the R100 competitive straight-line performance for its era, particularly against conventional 1,300-1,600 cc coupes.
Fuel Economy (approximate, mixed driving)
| Condition | L/100 km |
|---|
| Highway cruising | 9-11 |
| Mixed driving | 11-14 |
| Spirited / urban driving | 14-17 |
Rotary engines consume more fuel than equivalent-displacement piston engines. The R100’s real-world economy is broadly comparable to a 1,800-2,000 cc piston engine of the same era. Oil consumption is also higher than a piston engine by design, owing to the metered oil injection system that lubricates the apex seals.
Electrical
| Spec | Value |
|---|
| System Voltage | 12V negative earth |
| Battery | 12V, approx. 40-45 Ah |
| Charging | Alternator |
| Ignition | Points-type distributor |
| Headlights | Sealed beam |
| Instruments | Speedometer, tachometer, fuel gauge, water temperature gauge |
Fluid Capacities
| Fluid | Capacity |
|---|
| Engine Oil (with filter) | Approx. 3.5 L |
| Gearbox Oil (manual) | Approx. 1.3 L |
| Differential Oil | Approx. 1.0 L |
| Coolant | Approx. 6.5 L |
| Fuel Tank | 43-50 L (varies by market) |
| Brake Fluid Reservoir | Approx. 0.3 L |
Service Intervals
| Service Item | Interval |
|---|
| Engine oil and filter | 5,000 km or 3 months |
| Spark plugs | 15,000 km |
| Ignition points | 10,000 km (adjust), 20,000 km (replace) |
| Compression test | Annually (recommended) |
| Coolant | 24 months or 40,000 km |
| Gearbox oil | 40,000 km |
| Differential oil | 40,000 km |
| Brake fluid | 24 months |
| Valve clearance | N/A (rotary engine has no valves) |
Rotary-Specific Maintenance Notes
The 10A engine has no valves, camshafts, or valve train to service, but it does require attention to components unique to the Wankel design. Apex seal condition is the primary determinant of engine health. A compression test using a dedicated rotary compression tester (not a standard piston-engine gauge) should be performed at least annually. The oil metering pump must be checked for correct function — failure leads to inadequate apex seal lubrication and rapid engine wear. Coolant system integrity is critical, as the rotor housings are water-cooled and any overheating event can warp the soft aluminium housings. The thermal reactor exhaust system (on emissions-equipped cars) runs extremely hot and should be inspected regularly.
Production Numbers (Worldwide, Approximate)
| Detail | Value |
|---|
| Total Familia Rotary production (all variants) | Approx. 95,891 units |
| Peak production year | 1970 (approx. 31,328 units) |
| Primary markets | Japan, Australia, North America, Europe |
Production began in July 1968 and ended in 1973. The R100 name was used in export markets; Japanese-market cars were sold as the Familia Rotary Coupe (1968-1970) and Familia Presto Rotary Coupe (1970-1973 facelift). The R100 was succeeded in Mazda’s rotary coupe lineup by the Savanna (RX-3) from 1971.
Identification
Chassis Number
| Detail | Value |
|---|
| Prefix | M10A |
| Format | M10A-XXXXX (five or six digit sequential number) |
| Location | Stamped on the firewall (engine bay side) |
| Identification Plate | Driver’s door jamb |
Engine Number
| Detail | Value |
|---|
| Prefix | 10A |
| Location | Stamped on the front housing of the engine |
Pre-1981 Mazda vehicles do not use the modern 17-character VIN system. The M10A chassis prefix identifies the car as a Familia Rotary Coupe. The chassis plate on the driver’s door jamb also carries the paint code, production date, and market destination.
Competition History
The R100 was one of Mazda’s earliest international competition cars, and its racing programme played a key role in establishing the rotary engine’s reputation for reliability and high-rpm performance.
| Year | Event | Result | Drivers |
|---|
| 1969 | Singapore Grand Prix (Touring Car) | 1st (outright victory, debut race) | Yoshimi Katayama |
| 1969 | Marathon de la Route, Nurburgring (84 hours) | 5th overall | Katayama, Katakura, Deprez |
| 1969 | 24 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps | 5th and 6th overall | Katakura/Takechi, Deprez/Katayama, Dernier/de Fierlant |
| 1970 | 24 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps | 5th overall (Car #33) | Roger Enever, John Hine |
| 1969-1972 | Australian Touring Car events | Various class results | Multiple privateers |
At the 1969 Spa 24 Hours, the R100s competed against factory Porsche 911s, BMWs, Lancias, and Alfa Romeos. Finishing 5th and 6th behind four Porsche 911s earned them the nickname “Little Giants.” The 1969 event was marred by the fatal crash of Belgian co-driver Leon “Elde” Dernier. The R100s used aluminium peripheral-ported 10A race engines and proved the rotary’s suitability for endurance competition — a tradition Mazda would carry forward through the RX-3, RX-7, and ultimately the 787B’s Le Mans victory in 1991.
In Australia, the R100 was campaigned by privateers in state and national touring car events, including Bathurst. While it was not a dominant force at Bathurst (the later RX-2 and RX-3 would achieve greater success there), the R100 established Mazda’s presence in Australian motorsport and built a following among rotary enthusiasts.
Factory Colours (Period, Approximate)
Comprehensive factory colour records for the R100 are scarce. The following colours are documented from period brochures, surviving examples, and model-car reproductions. Availability varied by market and model year.
| Colour | Notes |
|---|
| White | One of the most common factory colours |
| Red | Frequently seen on surviving examples and period brochures |
| Green (Metallic) | Available on JDM and some export models |
| Blue (Metallic) | Available on later production models |
| Silver (Metallic) | Less common; documented on some export-market cars |
| Yellow | Available in some markets; less common |
| Beige / Cream | Documented on some JDM and Australian-market cars |
Paint codes are recorded on the chassis identification plate (driver’s door jamb). Due to the age and rarity of these vehicles, many surviving R100s have been repainted in non-original colours.
Model Year Changes
| Period | Changes |
|---|
| 1968 (launch) | Initial production as Familia Rotary Coupe (JDM) |
| 1969 | First full year of export sales; R100 name adopted for North America |
| 1970 | Facelift: revised front grille and tail lights; rebadged as Familia Presto Rotary Coupe in Japan |
| 1971-1972 | Sold as R100 in North America (US MSRP approx. $2,495-$2,790) |
| 1973 | Final production year; superseded by the Savanna (RX-3) |
Buying Notes
The R100 is now a rare and collectible vehicle, particularly in original unmodified condition. Key areas of concern for prospective buyers include apex seal condition (compression test is essential), rust in the lower body panels and wheel arches, availability of replacement body panels (very limited), and correctness of trim and mechanical components. Many surviving R100s have been modified for motorsport or fitted with later 12A or 13B rotary engines. Original 10A-powered cars in good condition command a premium. Parts availability is limited but supported by a dedicated global community of rotary enthusiasts and specialist suppliers.