Toyota Soarer JZZ30
Luxury GT; 1JZ/2JZ options; easier parts
Buyer's guide
15 min read
Buyer's guide & specs
Background
The Mazda Cosmo ran four generations across nearly 30 years — L10A/L10B Cosmo Sport (1967–1972), CD Cosmo AP (1975–1981), HB Cosmo Coupe (1981–1989), and the JC Eunos Cosmo (1990–1996). The JC is the demand center: it is the only production car ever built with a 3-rotor 20B-REW sequential twin-turbo, and the first production car in the world with a factory GPS navigation system. Every Cosmo was JDM-only at launch; 1990 JC cars cleared the 25-year import rule in 2015. The L10 Cosmo Sport and the JC 20B are both established blue-chip collector cars; the CD and HB generations sit between them in value.
The fourth-generation Cosmo (chassis JC, 1990–1996) was sold under Mazda's short-lived Eunos Cosmo luxury sub-brand. It is the only production car ever offered with a 3-rotor rotary engine — the 20B-REW — and the first car worldwide to ship with a built-in GPS-based navigation system, integrated into the touchscreen CCS Car Control System alongside HVAC, audio, and trip computer functions.
The 20B-REW used sequential twin turbochargers, rated at 280 PS and 41.0 kgm of torque. The smaller 13B-RE twin-rotor reached the same 280 PS but produced 30.0 kgm. Of the roughly 8,875 JC Cosmos built, only about 3,550 received the 20B; the rest used the 13B-RE.
Every JC Cosmo was a 2+2 grand tourer with 4-speed automatic transmission — no manual option existed. The chassis was JDM-only; the earliest US-legal cars cleared the 25-year rule in 2015.
The original L10A Cosmo Sport debuted at the 1964 Tokyo Motor Show as a prototype and entered production in May 1967 with a 10A twin-rotor engine, 4-speed manual, and a lightweight 2-seat coupe body. Mazda built 343 Series I L10A cars between 1967 and 1968, then introduced the L10B Series II in 1968 with a higher-output 10A producing roughly 128 hp, a 5-speed manual, and a 150 mm-longer wheelbase.
Total L10 production reached 1,176 units — some sources cite 1,519 including pre-production cars. Two Cosmo Sports entered the 1968 84-hour Marathon de la Route at the Nürburgring as a rotary durability test; one finished 4th overall, a result that confirmed Mazda's rotary development program for the decades that followed.
Editorial notes
Quick read
Constants
Chassis history
The Cosmo had four generations across nearly 30 years, and each one feels like a completely different car to own. The L10 Cosmo Sport from 1967 is a blue-chip classic. The CD and HB Cosmos sit quietly in the middle. The JC Eunos Cosmo from 1990 to 1996 is where the rotary story ends and where most of the money is.
Second generation — CD (1975–1981)
Third generation — HB (1981–1989)
Buyer's call
The Cosmo is one of those cars where the highs are very high and the lows are very low. Mazda built it to be a halo car first and a daily driver second, and that shows up in both columns.
Reliability
Most Cosmo trouble traces back to two things. The rotary doesn't forgive heat. The early 1990s electronics don't forgive time. The cooling system, the vacuum lines, the sequential turbo plumbing, and the CCS touchscreen on the JC are the parts that fail most often. Apex seals are the expensive one when they go.
| Issue | Cause | Solution | Est. cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low compression / hard start | Worn apex/side seals from heat or detonation | Compression test; rebuild 20B with quality seals | $8000-15000 |
| Hot start flooding | Weak ignition, leaking injectors, bad cranking rpm | Refresh coils/leads/plugs; service injectors; starter | $800-2500 |
| Overheating in traffic | Aging radiator, stuck thermostat, fan control faults | New rad/thermostat; fix fan relays; bleed properly | $600-1800 |
| Heater core leak | Old core corrodes; coolant neglected | Replace heater core; flush system; new hoses/clamps | $900-2000 |
| Sequential turbo flat spot | Vacuum leaks, wrong hose routing, stuck actuators | Vacuum line kit + diagram; free actuators; smoke test | $400-2000 |
| Overboost/boost spikes | Wastegate solenoid issues or hacked boost control | Restore OEM control; test solenoids; set safe boost | $300-1500 |
| Dead 2nd turbo | Seized actuator, failed control valves, cracked lines | Rebuild/replace actuators/valves; verify changeover | $800-3500 |
| Turbo oil smoke | Worn turbo seals or restricted oil return | Rebuild turbos; clean/replace oil return lines | $1500-4500 |
| Vacuum hose rot | Heat cycles harden hoses; missing restrictors | Replace all vacuum hoses; correct tees/restrictors | $200-900 |
| Ignition misfire under load | Weak coils/leads, wrong plugs, poor grounds | New coils/leads/plugs; clean grounds; verify dwell | $500-1800 |
| Injector clog/leak | Old fuel, varnish, internal corrosion | Ultrasonic clean/flow test or replace injectors | $400-1600 |
| Fuel hose seep/fire risk | Original rubber lines crack; ethanol exposure | Replace bay hoses with EFI-rated line and clamps | $200-800 |
| Oil metering failure | OMP motor/lines fail; lines brittle or deleted | Test OMP; replace lines; restore system or premix plan | $300-1500 |
| Oil cooler line leaks | Aged hoses and crimp fittings seep | Replace cooler lines; inspect fittings; clean undertray | $300-1200 |
| Automatic trans slipping | Heat, old ATF, worn clutches; boost abuse | Rebuild A/T; add cooler; correct line pressure issues | $2500-5500 |
| Delayed D/R engagement | Low ATF, worn valve body, internal seal wear | Diagnose pressure; service valve body or rebuild | $600-4500 |
| Driveshaft vibration | Worn center bearing or U-joints | Rebuild/replace driveshaft; check mounts and angles | $400-1200 |
| Diff whine/leaks | Worn bearings or pinion seal; old fluid | Reseal; rebuild diff if noisy; use correct gear oil | $250-1800 |
| Steering rack leak | Rack seals fail; boots fill with ATF | Rebuild/replace rack; flush PS; replace hoses | $800-2000 |
| PS pump whine | Air ingestion from old hoses or worn pump | Replace suction hose/clamps; rebuild/replace pump | $250-900 |
| Rear toe instability | Worn rear toe links/bushings; alignment off | Replace links/bushings; full alignment | $400-1200 |
| Front ball joint wear | Age and heavy chassis load | Replace ball joints/control arms; align | $400-1200 |
| Brake caliper sticking | Corroded sliders/pistons from old fluid | Rebuild calipers; new hoses; flush fluid | $500-1500 |
| ABS warning light | Wheel speed sensors or aged ABS module | Scan; replace sensor; repair wiring; module rebuild | $200-1200 |
| Digital dash failure | Capacitors age; cracked solder joints | Cluster rebuild with caps/solder; verify grounds | $300-900 |
| Climate control dead LCD | Backlight/cap failure; ribbon cable issues | Rebuild HVAC control unit; repair ribbon/backlight | $250-800 |
| Blend door not switching | Vacuum/servo failure; brittle actuators | Diagnose vacuum/servos; replace actuators as needed | $300-1200 |
| Window regulator slow/dead | Worn motors, dry tracks, failing switches | Clean/lube tracks; replace regulator/motor/switch | $200-700 |
| Pop-up headlight issues | Worn gears, tired motors, bad relays | Rebuild motor/gears; check relays and grounds | $200-800 |
| Sunroof water leaks | Clogged drains; shrunken seal | Clear drains; reseal; repair rusted drain tubes | $150-900 |
| Cowl water intrusion | Blocked cowl drains; seam sealer failure | Clear drains; reseal seams; address rust promptly | $200-1500 |
| Interior connector corrosion | Past water leaks under carpet | Dry interior; clean/replace connectors; fix leak source | $300-2000 |
| Brittle engine harness | Heat and age; prior alarm/tune hacks | Repair wiring properly; replace sections; re-pin plugs | $500-2500 |
| Vacuum solenoid failure | Age/heat kills solenoids controlling turbos/HVAC | Test solenoids; replace; restore correct plumbing | $200-1200 |
| Exhaust manifold cracks | Heat cycling and thin cast sections | Repair/replace manifold; check studs and gaskets | $500-2000 |
| Engine mount collapse | Oil saturation and age | Replace mounts; inspect crossmember and exhaust flex | $400-1200 |
| Rust in rockers/floors | Poor storage, clogged drains, prior repairs | Cut/weld properly; treat cavities; avoid filler fixes | $1500-8000 |
Market
Mazda never officially sold the Cosmo in the United States across any of its four generations. The L10A/L10B Cosmo Sport (1967–1972), CD Cosmo AP (1975–1981), HB Cosmo Coupe (1981–1989), and JC Eunos Cosmo (1990–1996) were all JDM-market cars. Limited CD-generation exports reached select markets with 4-cylinder piston engines only — never the rotary — and the HB-based Mazda 929 sold in some export regions used piston engines. The JC Eunos Cosmo, including the 20B-REW 3-rotor, was JDM-only with no export equivalent at any point. All Cosmos are RHD. North American availability is purely under the 25-year import exemption: 1990 JC Cosmos became eligible in 2015; 1995 cars in 2020; later years roll in 25 years after their build date. The complete absence of a USDM equivalent — unlike the Celsior/Lexus LS or RX-7/RX-7 pairings — is one reason the Cosmo remains comparatively unknown outside enthusiast circles, despite its technical significance.
Specs
Every Cosmo got a rotary at some point, but the engine you actually want is the 20B-REW in the JC. It's the only triple-rotor production engine Mazda ever sold, rated at 280 PS and 41.0 kgm under the gentlemen's agreement. The smaller 13B-RE twin-rotor in the other JC trims hit the same 280 PS but only 30.0 kgm of torque, so the 20B feels noticeably stronger in the middle of the rev range.
| Chassis | Engine | Displacement | Power | Boost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| L10A | 10A | 0.982L (491cc×2) | 110hp @ 7000rpm | N/A | Carbureted 2-rotor; early Cosmo |
| L10A | 10A | 0.982L (491cc×2) | 128hp @ 7000rpm | N/A | Later tune; 5MT-era output |
| CD | 13B | 1.308L (654cc×2) | 135hp @ 6000rpm | N/A | Carbureted rotary; Cosmo AP |
| HB | 12A | 1.146L (573cc×2) | 130hp @ 6500rpm | N/A | NA 12A; market/year dependent |
| HB | 13B | 1.308L (654cc×2) | 135hp @ 6000rpm | N/A | NA 13B; market/year dependent |
| HB | 13B-T | 1.308L (654cc×2) | 180hp @ 6500rpm | 7.3 psi | Single turbo; typical JDM spec |
| JC | 13B-RE | 1.308L (654cc×2) | 230ps @ 6500rpm | 10.2 psi | Sequential twin-turbo; JDM rated |
| JC | 13B-RE | 1.308L (654cc×2) | 230ps @ 6500rpm | 10.2 psi | Torque: 30.0kgm @ 3500rpm |
| JC | 20B-REW | 1.962L (654cc×3) | 280ps @ 6500rpm | 10.2 psi | Sequential twin-turbo; JDM cap era |
| JC | 20B-REW | 1.962L (654cc×3) | 280ps @ 6500rpm | 10.2 psi | Torque: 41.0kgm @ 3000rpm |
| Type | Ratios | Availability | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4-speed Manual | 3.307/1.938/1.310/1.000 | L10A Cosmo Sport | Early Cosmo Sport manual |
| 5-speed Manual | 3.307/2.077/1.391/1.000/0.864 | L10B Cosmo Sport | Later Cosmo Sport manual |
| 3-speed Automatic | 2.458/1.458/1.000 | CD Cosmo AP (some) | Market/year dependent |
| 5-speed Manual | 3.483/2.015/1.391/1.000/0.864 | CD/HB (some) | Typical Mazda RWD 5MT family |
| 4-speed Automatic | 2.800/1.540/1.000/0.700 | HB Cosmo (some) | Market/year dependent |
| 4-speed Automatic (electronically controlled) | 2.800/1.540/1.000/0.700 | JC Type E/S/SX/Type R/RS/RS-X | 4EAT; all JC were automatic |
Lineup
JC Eunos Cosmos came in six trims. Type E, Type S, and Type SX all use the 13B-RE twin-rotor. Type R, Type RS, and Type RS-X all use the 20B-REW triple-rotor. The R, RS, and RS-X are the ones collectors chase. The difference between them is interior and equipment level, not the engine.
| Generation | Trim | Engine | Key features |
|---|---|---|---|
| L10A (1st gen, 1967-1972) | Cosmo Sport (L10A) | 10A 491cc×2 rotary (NA) | 2-rotor, 4MT, RWD, 2-seat coupe |
| L10B (1st gen, 1968-1972) | Cosmo Sport (L10B) | 10A 491cc×2 rotary (NA) | 2-rotor, 5MT, RWD, 2-seat coupe |
| CD (2nd gen, 1975-1981) | Cosmo AP | 13B 654cc×2 rotary (NA) | 2-rotor, RWD, luxury coupe, 5MT/3AT |
| CD (2nd gen, 1975-1981) | Cosmo AP (piston) | 2.0L/2.6L I4 (NA) | RWD, 5MT/3AT, export-dependent spec |
| HB (3rd gen, 1981-1989) | Cosmo (HB) 12A | 12A 573cc×2 rotary (NA) | 2-rotor, RWD, 5MT/4AT, luxury coupe |
| HB (3rd gen, 1981-1989) | Cosmo (HB) 13B | 13B 654cc×2 rotary (NA) | 2-rotor, RWD, 5MT/4AT, higher output |
| HB (3rd gen, 1981-1989) | Cosmo (HB) 13B-T | 13B-T 654cc×2 rotary (Turbo) | turbo, RWD, 5MT/4AT, flagship rotary |
| JC (Eunos Cosmo, 1990-1995) | Type E | 13B-RE 654cc×2 rotary (TT) | twin-turbo, 4AT, RWD, 2+2, CCS nav |
| JC (Eunos Cosmo, 1990-1995) | Type S | 13B-RE 654cc×2 rotary (TT) | twin-turbo, 4AT, RWD, higher equipment |
| JC (Eunos Cosmo, 1990-1995) | Type SX | 13B-RE 654cc×2 rotary (TT) | twin-turbo, 4AT, RWD, top luxury spec |
| JC (Eunos Cosmo, 1990-1995) | Type R | 20B-REW 654cc×3 rotary (TT) | 3-rotor, twin-turbo, 4AT, RWD, flagship |
| JC (Eunos Cosmo, 1990-1995) | Type RS | 20B-REW 654cc×3 rotary (TT) | 3-rotor, twin-turbo, 4AT, RWD, sport-lux |
| JC (Eunos Cosmo, 1990-1995) | Type RS-X | 20B-REW 654cc×3 rotary (TT) | 3-rotor, twin-turbo, 4AT, RWD, highest spec |
Pricing
The L10A Cosmo Sport launched in Japan in May 1967 at roughly 1,480,000 yen, which made it a halo-tier purchase well above the rest of the Mazda lineup. The numbers below are what a Cosmo costs today. The spread is wide because the market is barbell shaped. Clean L10 Sport coupes and clean JC 20B cars both command real money, and the CD and HB Cosmos in the middle stay relatively affordable.
Original MSRP: ¥1,480,000 at launch in 1967. Approximate launch list price in yen for the L10A Cosmo Sport in Japan, May 1967. The car was positioned as a halo-tier purchase well above Mazda's other model lines; later generations were priced by trim and engine and varied significantly. Exact JDM list prices for every Cosmo trim across 1967–1996 were not pulled in this migration.
Today's market range: $12,000 to $90,000 (median ~$32,000). Source: JDMBUYSELL / USS Auction.
JC 20B cars remain the demand center: top, original, low-mile examples trend upward, while needy/CCS-dead cars lag. Post-2020 spike cooled, but rarity supports firm pricing; expect widening spread between collector-grade and project cars.
Inspect
Walk this list with the seller, not in front of them. The Critical items mean walking away if there's no paperwork backing them up. A warm compression test on the 20B is the one thing that matters more than anything else. If the seller won't allow it, that tells you what you need to know.
Cross-shop
If the Cosmo doesn't end up being the right car, the natural alternatives are the Mazda RX-7 FD3S if you want a sharper rotary sports car, or the Toyota Soarer if you want a luxury GT without the rotary upkeep. The Supra and the Z32 give you twin-turbo grand tourer feel with parts that are easier to find.
Luxury GT; 1JZ/2JZ options; easier parts
90s twin-turbo GT; faster feel; more supply
Collector/tuner benchmark; robust 2JZ; very liquid
Motorsport legend; AWD grip; huge global demand
Compare
Compared to the Supra, the GT-R, and the RX-7, the Cosmo is the rarest of the group and the most complicated to own. The 20B is the only triple-rotor production engine ever built, and the JC was the first car in the world with built-in GPS navigation. You're paying for that history, not for ease of ownership.
| Feature | Mazda Cosmo | Toyota Supra JZA80 | Nissan Skyline GT-R R32 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Engine layout | 20B 3-rotor TT (JC) | 2JZ-GTE I6 TT | RB26DETT I6 TT |
| Transmission | 4-speed automatic only | 6MT/4AT (market dep.) | 5MT |
| Power (JDM rated) | 280 PS (gentlemen’s) | 280 PS (JDM) | 280 PS (JDM) |
| Torque character | Smooth, revvy; strong mid | Big low-end; easy 400+ hp | Peaky; loves revs |
| Curb weight feel | Heavy GT; stable cruiser | Heavy but sporty GT | Lighter, sharper sports car |
| Cabin/tech | CCS infotainment, luxury focus | Driver-focused, simpler tech | Luxury GT, less CCS complexity |
| Rarity (US market) | Very rare; JDM-only | Imported/USDM available | USDM existed; more supply |
| Maintenance risk | High: rotary + CCS + TT | Medium: robust 2JZ, aging | Medium-high: VG30DETT heat |
| Collector narrative | 20B halo; tech flagship | Iconic tuner/hero car | Motorsport legend |
| Driving mission | High-speed luxury GT | Sports GT / grand touring | Pure sports coupe |
| Mod friendliness | Possible but complex packaging | Huge aftermarket; easy gains | Strong aftermarket; tighter margins |
| Ownership costs | High; niche parts & labor | Medium-high; better parts supply | High; labor-intensive packaging |
| Resale liquidity | Best cars sell fast; odd specs lag | Very liquid; broad buyer base | Liquid among JDM buyers |
Gallery
Editorial
The car that matters in the Cosmo lineup is the JC Eunos Cosmo with the 20B-REW. The L10 Cosmo Sport is a museum piece; the CD and HB generations attract a narrow audience. The JC 20B is what the market prices and what most buyers actually pursue.
Inside the JC range, the Type R, Type RS, and Type RS-X all received the 20B. The Type E, S, and SX use the smaller 13B-RE twin-rotor — a capable engine, but without the same collector pull. Of the roughly 8,875 JC Cosmos built, only about 3,550 got the 20B, so supply is limited from the start.
The single most important check is a warm compression test on all six faces of the 20B. Apex seal failure is the mode that turns a $30,000 car into a $45,000 repair. The CCS touchscreen and digital climate panel are the second priority — both fail with age, and rebuilds exist but parts and labor are niche.
Skip anything with unknown ECU tunes or mystery boost modifications. The 20B is unforgiving when fueling or vacuum routing is wrong, and a hacked car can destroy the engine quickly. Verify the oil metering pump is present, functional, and has intact lines — it is not optional.
The strongest JC Cosmos available are low-mileage Type RS-X cars with working CCS, documented compression, and service records covering the cooling system and vacuum lines. That combination is harder to find each year, and the gap between collector-grade examples and unfinished projects continues to widen.
FAQ
Citations
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