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The car was a '93 Mazda RX-7 street car with only bolt-on accessories. At season end Pettit had 140 points—63 points more than the second place team. This same car finished the Daytona Rolex 24-hour race four times. The RX-7 also fared well at the Spa 24 Hours race. Three Savanna/RX-7s were entered in 1981 by Tom Walkinshaw Racing.
1997 Mazda RX-7, with Veilside, body kit Fast & Furious: 1967 Chevrolet C-Series, with a custom tail trailer and truck tires Fast Five: 1970 Ford Maverick: 2011 Subaru Impreza WRX STI: 2011 Dodge Charger R/T Police Car: 2010 Lexus LFA: Fast & Furious 6: 2010 BMW E60 M5 2012 Dodge Charger SRT8 1997 Mazda RX-7, with Veilside, body kit (archival ...
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However, the car in the movie was actually powered by the Silvia's original engine. [20] The Veilside body-kitted Mazda RX-7, (dubbed "Fortune"), driven by Han was originally built by Veilside for the 2005 Tokyo Auto Salon, but was later bought by Universal and repainted from dark red, to orange and black, for use in the movie. [21]
1971-1991 Mazda Savanna sports car; 1972–1997 Parkway minibus; 1973–1997 929 full-size car; 1978–2002 RX-7 sports car; 1978–2003 626, export version of the Mazda Capella; 1988–1992 Persona mid-size car; 1988–2002 121 compact car; 1988–1997 MX-6 coupé; 1988–2016 MPV/Mazda8 minivan; 1990–1998 Sentia luxury car; 1990–1998 MX-3 ...
The design of the Iconic SP was inspired by the FD Mazda RX-7. [2] The car uses a two-rotor Rotary-EV system that uses a rotary engine that can use a variety of fuels, including hydrogen, making it virtually carbon neutral and also capable of supplying power to external sources. [3]
It was exported as the Mazda RX-3 in its first generation from 1971 to 1978, and as the Mazda RX-7 in its subsequent generations. For the original 1971 version of Savanna, Mazda fitted its 10A rotary engine to the Mazda Grand Familia to create a separately marketed product sold in coupé, sedan, and station wagon guises. The engine was upgraded ...
The Mazda GTP is an IMSA GTP race car that was built by Pierre Honegger in 1981. Based on a Mazda RX-7, the car initially competed in the GTX category as the Mazda RX-7 GTP, before it was rebuilt for the IMSA GTP category in 1983. Throughout its career, the car used a Mazda 13B Wankel rotary engine, similar to