In theory, as long as you can fabricate an excentric shaft, and bolt cases together, any number of rotors can be made into one engine, with reasonable common sense, as the one in the video is a 6 rotor. Sequential EFI would be the only sensible induction system.
The most successful motorcycle Wankels were, I believe, the Norton Interceptor units, were built for British police work, and as endurance race engines, very successful. Hercules had an air cooled single rotor design for a Sachs built bike, and Yamaha, Honda, Kawasaki all did feasibility study prototypes. I saw both the Yamaha and Kawasaki prototype test Wankel's in person, heard both run, but didn't get the opportunity to ride either. Both were a lot nicer than the RE5 I own.
I haven't stayed right up with rotary tech of late, but am aware that the Wankels are reasonably efficient on intake workings, having very slightly less intake reversion than a piston port two stroke. I wonder, and what results were found, if someone has tried to add a good reed valve to the inlet tract on one. From the Mazda experience I have had, the EFI rotary's are a lot better at not belching up raw fuel vapor back into the inlet tracts, but only because they are mostly dry air fed, fuel injection nozzles down in the inlet tract, very near the rotor port. On a carburetted Mazda rotary, with wet fuel in the inlet tract all the way back up to the carburetor, they were fairly miserable with reversion back up the line. Maybe John would know.
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