Originally Posted By: mechanicx
Yeah, I'm just saying that GM had the ability improve the rotary but just chose not too. I think Mazda put all that effort into the rotary with plans to use it widespread. And I think history proved that the rotary was of limited use.
I don't know if GM could or couldn't. GM at the time had a definite smugness about them that would not allow them to accept anyone else's technology. They absolutely could have easily reverse engineered a Mazda and maybe even made a few improvements but I do not think their corporate ego would let them.
NSU couldn't make it at all reliable and their rotaries actually made it to production. Suzuki actually copied and corrected the NSU design.
Originally Posted By: mechanicx
I think with domestics, usually only a few of the cheapest economy engines were timing belt, or limited production like the GM DOHC 3.4, or engines that were a foreign design. They didn't stick timing belts and mechanical cams on just about every engine, often with no regard to interference like Japanese tended to do.
The bulk of them were also OHV designs. Chevrolet 2200, Pontiac 151, Ford HSC, AMC 150... You
can use a timing belt on an OHV engine but almost no engine maker does. The Quad4 is the first domestic (D)OHC 4cyl I can think of with a timing chain. Ford CVH, Chevette, Vega, and Chrysler K engines were belt driven.
Originally Posted By: mechanicx
Also I called the Mazda engine an Atkinson, but being supercharged it was a Miller cycle named after an American engineer who came up with it. Just like the rotary was invented by a European. Seems like a trend of most of the ideas were not invented in Japan.
Yep.
I can't think of anything technological that the Japanese originated. They take existing ideas and make them more efficient, work better, work better in conjunction with other ideas, smaller, etc....
Like the A6M Zero. There was no pioneering technology in this aircraft. You see design influences from Vought and Pratt and Whitney throughout. But it was put together in such a way that at the onset of the war it was the best carrier based fighter plane in the world.