Norton rotary, Cycle's April 1990 article.
"Unlike most other Wankel rotaries, the Norton engine uses air rather than oil to cool its rotors. This reduces internal friction and makes for a
mechanically simpler engine, at the expense of having to route intake air
along a convoluted path.
"Entering through air filters inside the right and left sides of the fairing,
twin airstreams travel down through the rotor bearings (lubricated by
two-stroke oil), cool the spinning rotors from the inside, then meet in the
engine's middle before being drawn up and out into a plenum chamber. From there, the air enters the two 34mm Mikuni downdraft carbs and is charged into the combustion chambers."
"On the race bike, a simpler, more effective intake system is used:Carburetors pull cool air directly from the atmosphere, while the rotors are cooled by air sucked through the engine and into the exhaust by an air-ejector system (which means the two-stoke oil that lubricates the engine passes through unburned). Those two modifications win an extra 30 horsepower, but aren't practical for road use."
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