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Mazmart www.mazmart.com (GA) RX-7 & RX-8 engine builds, stock/custom parts, home of Rick Engman |
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#4 | |
Rotary Fan in Training
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Atlanta
Posts: 31
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Quote:
It's important for me to be up front and honest: R&D has been several years on these but I will not claim to have real world everyday driving mileage info to share at this time. The main purpose of these in design is to provide seals that are stronger yet yielding than anything else in order to reduce damage to other components in adverse conditions or catastrophe brought on by tuning flaws or just pushing the envelope too far (There are rotaries pumping 70 psi these days). ![]() We have been testing with drag race clients with great results. The housing claim only relates to lab testing vs Mazda OEM and other brands, in terms of friction properties. What you will find with I-Rotary Maximum Boost seals is PRECISION! When you measure each seal, the consistency is on par with Mazda with variances no more than a hundredth of a millimeter. As an overview: Built for Racing, with strength and yielding properties as a priority to reduce or prevent damage to other parts in a catastrophic failure, with MUCH GREATER PRECISION and design characteristics for the purpose of better compression, easier starting and higher horsepower. Lastly we spent time on material compatibility with friction characteristics being addressed. We believe that the Mazda OE seal has better material compatibility with it's housing than ANY other seal except the best of the ceramics and we recommend 2 to 2.5 oz of quality pre-mix per gallon on cars with deleted metering systems using using I-Rotary Maximum Boost seals with gasoline. thanks for the intelligent question, Paul. |
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boost, drag, i-rotary, mazmart |
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