The Mazda MX-5 Thread

Mazda hints at electric MX-5 in revised EV strategy

Japanese manufacturer announces £9bn investment in future electric cars, shows new sports-oriented concept

Mazda has previewed a sleek two-seat coupé – which could hint at the next-generation MX-5 – alongside the announcement of an £8.9 billion investment into future electric vehicles.

Although the firm did not detail the model, instead relegating it to a five-minute promotional video at the end of a financial presentation, it was shown alongside a series of Mazda MX-5 convertibles. This suggests it could be an early look at the next-generation sports car, despite being a hard-top coupé with Lamborghini-style scissor doors.

Also shown was an early look at the model’s chassis, with a large space for a longitudinally mounted engine and a structure – likely a fuel cell or battery enclosure – behind the driver. However, the concept’s lack of exhausts – coupled with Mazda’s major investment in future EVs – seems to confirm it is an electric vehicle, in its current form.

Mazda’s European head of product development and engineering, Joachim Kunz, hinted in April that the MX-5 will be considered completely separate to the brand’s mainstream models.

“It’s our brand icon and it is always treated very specially,” Kunz told Autocar. “At the moment, it looks like we will have this car forever, with this size and concept and combustion engine. Of course, some day, we will have to electrify it, but we want to keep this pure concept.”

 
A Bone-Stock Mazda Miata Completed a 1,000-Mile UK Road Trip Using Synthetic Fuel

The Miata was also able to lap multiple tracks around the UK during the road trip.

While EVs are on the come-up, not everyone wants to drive them. Many, especially gearheads, still want an old-fashioned internal combustion engine. The problem is pollution, which is what EVs aim to solve. But what if you could have the best of both worlds: no shitty emissions and the ability to still drive a regular engine? Enter synthetic fuel. And Mazda may have proven that trouble-free emissions can be possible with synthetic fuel with no modifications necessary.

Mazda partnered with UK-based synthetic fuel research firm Coryton. Coryton created a synthetic fuel using 100 percent agricultural waste. A stock MX-5 Miata with a 2.0-liter engine was filled up using the fuel before hitting the road on a 1,000-mile road trip around the U.K. What’s even more impressive is that the Miata was able to hit four different tracks across the country for laps during the trip: Anglesey in Wales, Oulton Park in England, Knockhill in Scotland and Kirkistown in Northern Ireland. Mazda says the Miata ran exactly how a gas-engined car would with no issues. It was able to get good gas mileage too, averaging a hybrid like 45.6 mpg during the trip.

 
Mazda MX-5 "will never die" as sports car market transforms

Layout of next-gen car is to be confirmed, however popular sports car will remain part of lineup

The Mazda MX-5 “will never die” but the Japanese company has yet to commit to the technical make-up of the next-generation version.

Mazda’s CEO in Europe, Martijn ten Brink, said the current car, first launched in 2015, will continue to be updated and is under no threat of being taken off sale from emissions or other legislation.

“How do you stay true to the concept of what the car stands for taking it into the next generation of technologies?” he said, when asked about plans for the next MX-5. “That’s not been decided. But I think for Mazda it would be fair to say that the MX-5 will never die.

“I think it will continue to exist forever and it will have to go with the times. That’s a super challenge, and people are passionate about this car in Mazda.

“Of course, as you can imagine, people have opinions on which direction it should go. So I’m very curious where it will end up, but it will definitely remain part of the line-up.”

 
Mazda MX-5 review

WHAT'S THE VERDICT?

“The MX-5 isn’t the world’s best-selling roadster by accident, with simple mechanicals and accessible fun”

The Mazda MX-5 isn’t the world’s best-selling roadster by accident – its recipe of simple mechanicals and accessible fun mean it’s a car with low running costs and broad appeal. And there's nothing else left in the segment that does so much for so little.

Mazda has successfully resisted messing with the formula and created a car that just wants to put a smile on your face at sensible speeds. A day with the roof down in one of these will do your soul the world of good.

 
“The MX-5 isn’t the world’s best-selling roadster by accident, with simple mechanicals and accessible fun”
For a sec I thought they were measuring popularity by the number of accidents it had been in :laugh:
 
This limited edition Mazda MX-5 Kizuna is special for three reasons

And those reasons are the paint, the roof, and the leather…

It’s been a couple of years since we saw the last in a (very) long line of vaguely special, limited-edition MX-5s, but now Mazda has noticed the gap and hastily revealed this.

This being the MX-5 Kizuna, costing £30,265 and limited to 250 examples in the UK. It’ll be arriving in dealerships from next month.

So, what makes it noteworthy? Three things, and only three things. You get the choice of Machine Grey or Deep Crystal Blue paint (only 70 of the former, but 180 of the latter), both of which are trimmed with a blue soft-top roof for much sophistication.

That’s two things. The third is the Light Stone Nappa leather interior, which is usually reserved for the top-spec Homura model. And that’s it.


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