Key Takeaways
- JC Cosmo 20B is the value driver and most collectible
- Electronics/CCS condition can make or break a purchase
- Cooling & vacuum health matter more than peak power
- Originality beats mods for resale; stock ECU/airbox helps
- Parts scarcity and specialist labor raise ownership costs
- Import timing: 1990 cars US-legal in 2015 (25-year)
Technical Specifications
Engine Options
| Engine | Displacement | Power | Boost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10A | 0.982L (491cc×2) | 110hp @ 7000rpm | N/A | Carbureted 2-rotor; early Cosmo |
| 10A | 0.982L (491cc×2) | 128hp @ 7000rpm | N/A | Later tune; 5MT-era output |
| 13B | 1.308L (654cc×2) | 135hp @ 6000rpm | N/A | Carbureted rotary; Cosmo AP |
| 12A | 1.146L (573cc×2) | 130hp @ 6500rpm | N/A | NA 12A; market/year dependent |
| 13B | 1.308L (654cc×2) | 135hp @ 6000rpm | N/A | NA 13B; market/year dependent |
| 13B-T | 1.308L (654cc×2) | 180hp @ 6500rpm | 7.3 psi | Single turbo; typical JDM spec |
| 13B-RE | 1.308L (654cc×2) | 230ps @ 6500rpm | 10.2 psi | Sequential twin-turbo; JDM rated |
| 13B-RE | 1.308L (654cc×2) | 230ps @ 6500rpm | 10.2 psi | Torque: 30.0kgm @ 3500rpm |
| 20B-REW | 1.962L (654cc×3) | 280ps @ 6500rpm | 10.2 psi | Sequential twin-turbo; JDM cap era |
| 20B-REW | 1.962L (654cc×3) | 280ps @ 6500rpm | 10.2 psi | Torque: 41.0kgm @ 3000rpm |
Transmission Options
| 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 |
Livability
- Headroom
- 37.0"
- Low roof; sunroof cars feel tighter with helmet
- Rear Seats
- 2+2, tight
- Adults fit short trips; legroom limited by front seats
- Cargo
- 8.0 cu ft
- Trunk is shallow; spare well usable but watch leaks
Variants & Trims
| 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 |
Should You Buy a Mazda Cosmo JC?
Why You'll Love It
- 20B triple-rotor exclusivity JC Cosmo’s 20B-REW is a unicorn: smooth, torquey rotary with major collector pull.
- Flagship Mazda luxury GT Quiet, high-speed cruiser with premium trim; a different vibe from RX-7’s raw sports focus.
- Strong upside on best examples Low-mile, original, fully working CCS cars command steep premiums and are most liquid.
- Tuning headroom (with caveats) 20B responds well to careful boost/fueling upgrades; reliability depends on cooling and mapping.
- Rarity supports long-term values JDM-only halo status and limited surviving clean cars underpin collector demand.
- Comfortable daily-classic potential Auto, stable ride, and refinement make it usable if you accept rotary upkeep and parts hunts.
Why You Might Not
- Complex electronics/CCS failures CCS screens, climate, audio, and modules can fail; repairs are niche and parts can be scarce.
- Rotary heat management critical Cooling, vacuum lines, and turbos must be right; neglect can mean expensive rebuilds.
- Automatic-only limits appeal 4AT suits GT use but caps enthusiast demand vs manual rivals; swaps hurt originality value.
- Weight and size vs sports cars Feels more grand tourer than RX-7; not as sharp, and consumables (brakes/tires) cost more.
- Parts and specialist labor premium 20B-specific parts and knowledgeable rotary shops are limited; downtime risk is real.
- Import/registration variability State rules, emissions testing, and insurer familiarity vary; paperwork quality affects resale.
Who Should NOT Buy This
- Anyone needing daily-driver reliability
- Buyers without rotary-specialist support nearby
- People who can't afford a $10k engine rebuild
- Anyone who won't do frequent fluid checks
- Owners who ignore warm-up and cooldown habits
- People wanting easy parts availability
- Those who hate electrical gremlins and old modules
- Anyone in strict emissions states without a plan
- Buyers who can't diagnose vacuum/boost systems
- People who want a manual transmission option
- Anyone expecting modern crash safety
- Drivers over 6'3" wanting lots of headroom
- People who park outside in wet climates
- Anyone who won't run premium fuel only
- Buyers tempted by unknown tunes/boost mods
- People who need usable rear seats regularly
- Owners who can't tolerate high fuel consumption
- Anyone who won't budget for cooling system refresh
- People who need strong A/C with zero fuss
- Buyers unwilling to source JDM-only interior parts
Common Issues & Solutions
| 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 |
Pre-Purchase Inspection Checklist
Critical Priority
- VIN/Model ID Confirm JC/NA Cosmo; match VIN to papers
- Import/Title Verify legal import, title status, no liens
- Front Frame Rails Inspect for kinks, pulls, fresh undercoat
- 20B Compression Warm compression test; record all 6 faces
- Exhaust Smoke Blue smoke hot = seals; white = coolant/ATF
- Oil Metering Pump Confirm OMP works; check lines for cracks/leaks
- Coolant System Pressure test; check rad end tanks, hoses
- Thermostat/Fans Verify fan stages; overheating kills rotaries fast
- Ignition Coils Check coil packs, leads; weak spark kills seals
- Automatic Trans Check ATF color; flare, harsh shifts, delayed D
- Modifications Avoid unknown ECU/boost mods; kills 20B fast
High Priority
- Accident History Check apron seams, overspray, uneven gaps
- Rear Subframe Mounts Check for rust, cracks, crushed bushings
- Sills/Rocker Panels Probe pinch welds; look for bubbling/patches
- Floor Pans Lift carpets; check dampness, rust, holes
- Sunroof Drains Pour water; confirm drains flow, no cabin leaks
- Windshield Cowl Check cowl rust; water leaks into HVAC/ECU
- Rear Quarter Rust Check arch lips and inner quarter for bubbling
- Cold Start Listen for hard start, flooding, uneven idle
- Idle Quality Check hunting idle; watch AFR/trim if possible
- Boost Behavior Verify smooth boost; no surge, no overboost
- Turbo Actuators Check sequential changeover; no dead 2nd turbo
- Vacuum Hoses Inspect brittle hoses; missing restrictors/tees
- Heater Core Check sweet smell, fogging, wet passenger carpet
- Fuel System Check fuel smell, cracked hoses, pump noise
- Injectors Listen for misfire; check injector resistance
- Spark Plugs Confirm correct heat range; no oil-fouling
- ECU/Diagnostics Pull codes; check hacked wiring, piggybacks
- Battery/Charging Check alternator output; low volts = ECU chaos
- AT Cooler Lines Inspect leaks; heat kills A/T quickly
- Front Suspension Check ball joints, control arm bush cracks
- Rear Suspension Check toe links, bushings; uneven tire wear
- Steering Rack Check play, leaks, torn boots, inner tie rods
- Brakes Check rotor lip, caliper leaks, seized sliders
- Climate Control Test all modes; blend doors and LCD failures
- Digital Dash Check dead pixels, dim backlight, flicker
- Seat Belts Check retractors; JDM belts can be aged/sticky
- Interior Water Check under seats for corrosion on connectors
- Service Records Look for coolant, ignition, vacuum refresh proof
Medium Priority
- Trunk Well Check spare well for water, rust, seam sealer
- Door Seals Inspect torn seals; check wet carpets after wash
- Underbody Coating Look for fresh tar hiding rust/repairs
- Intercooler Pipes Check oil pooling, loose clamps, cracked couplers
- Oil Leaks Check front cover, pan, turbo feeds/returns
- Power Steering Check pump whine, leaks at rack boots/lines
- Fuel Tank Rust Inspect filler neck, tank seams; debris in filter
- Engine Grounds Inspect grounds; voltage drop causes misfires
- Driveshaft Check center bearing, U-joints for play/vibes
- Differential Listen for whine; check leaks at pinion seals
- CV Axles Check torn boots, clicking on turns
- Shocks/Struts Look for leaks; bouncy ride = dead dampers
- ABS System Confirm ABS light self-test; scan for faults
- Headlights Check pop-up motors/aim; cloudy lenses
- Audio/Navigation Test OEM Bose/nav; parts are scarce/expensive
- Power Windows Check slow windows; regulators and switches fail
- Seat Motors Test all adjustments; gears strip, switches fail
- Key/Immobilizer Confirm all keys; alarm/immobilizer hacks common
Generation History
L10A/L10B Cosmo Sport (1967-1972)
- First Mazda rotary production halo car
- 10A rotary; lightweight GT coupe
- Low production; blue-chip collector status
- Motorsport pedigree; early rotary icon
CD Cosmo (AP/CD) (1975-1981)
- Larger luxury coupe; rotary & piston options
- Exported in limited numbers vs Japan
- Less collector heat than L10/JC
- Period luxury; softer GT focus
HB Cosmo (929 Coupe) (1981-1986)
- Often sold as 929 coupe in some markets
- Piston engines common; rotary rarer
- Undervalued classic; parts mixed availability
- More cruiser than performance flagship
JC Cosmo (Eunos Cosmo) (1990-1995)
- 20B-REW twin-turbo triple-rotor option
- High-tech CCS infotainment; luxury GT
- 4-speed auto only; heavy but fast
- RHD JDM-only; import demand rising
Market Data
Production Numbers & Rarity
| Generation | Years | Total Built | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| L10 (Cosmo Sport) | 1967-1972 | 1,519 | Low-volume halo rotary coupe |
| CD (Cosmo AP) | 1975-1981 | estimated | Exact totals vary by source/market |
| HB (Cosmo) | 1981-1989 | estimated | Exact totals vary by source/market |
| JC (Eunos Cosmo) | 1990-1995 | ~8,875 | Commonly cited total; verify by VIN logs |
Rarest variant: Cosmo Sport L10A
How It Compares
| Feature | JC | 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 |
Comparable Alternatives
Toyota Soarer JZZ30
Luxury GT; 1JZ/2JZ options; easier parts
Nissan 300ZX Z32 TT
90s twin-turbo GT; faster feel; more supply
Mazda RX-7 FD3S
Rotary icon; lighter and sharper; strong support
Toyota Supra JZA80
Collector/tuner benchmark; robust 2JZ; very liquid
Nissan Skyline GT-R R32
Motorsport legend; AWD grip; huge global demand
Frequently Asked Questions
- Which Mazda Cosmo is the most collectible?
- The JC Eunos Cosmo 20B (1990–1995) leads. Earlier Cosmo Sport (L10) is also blue-chip but different market.
- What should I check first when inspecting a JC Cosmo?
- Prioritize compression, hot starts, coolant health, vacuum lines, and whether CCS electronics and climate controls work.
- Are all JC Cosmos 20B twin-turbo?
- The flagship 20B-REW is twin-turbo. Other JC trims used smaller rotary options; verify by VIN/engine code and paperwork.
- Is the automatic transmission a problem?
- Not inherently; it suits the GT mission. But it limits demand vs manuals, and swaps usually reduce collector originality.
- What are common failure points?
- Cooling system, brittle vacuum hoses, turbo control issues, aging sensors, and CCS screen/module faults are frequent.
- How expensive is a 20B rebuild?
- Costs vary widely by region and parts; expect high specialist pricing. Buy on condition: a cheap car can become the priciest.
- What makes values jump the most?
- Low miles, stock condition, clean import history, working CCS, and documented rotary health drive the biggest premiums.
- When is the JC Cosmo US-legal to import?
- Under the 25-year rule, 1990 cars became legal in 2015; each later model year becomes legal 25 years after build date.
Sources & References
- Mazda Cosmo/Eunos Cosmo period brochures — Mazda
- Mazda rotary engine service literature (20B/REW) — Mazda
- Historic auction results and dealer comps (JC Cosmo) — Auction house data
- Contemporary road tests: Eunos Cosmo — Japanese motoring press
- US import guidance: 25-year exemption overview — NHTSA