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One video that Mazda shows its employees
depicts, among other things, a kid playing with a toy car. He’s whisking it
across a tabletop with obvious delight. “Zoom-zoom,” he says with a giant grin.
“Zoom-zoom.”
Then it shows kids maturing into
adults, assuming responsibilities, jobs, and kids of their own. But a fun-loving
few never stop having fun. They take good care of their responsibilities but
continue enjoying their hobbies and sports, making time to play as hard as they
work.
Mazda has positioned itself as the
car for those people, the zoom-zoom car. It’s about spirit, attitude, thinking
young. In marketing speak, that’s the “brand DNA.” It’s a good position for
smaller maker Mazda to occupy. If people understand and buy into it, it sets the
brand and its products apart…provided they live up to that
positioning.
What is
it?
Now comes Mazda5. Looking like a
car-based crossover (CUV) or tall small wagon, it’s a crisp, sporty execution of
the two-box shape that’s fast becoming popular in various sizes – from Scion xA
to Chevrolet Equinox to Cadillac SRX. But what it really is…shhh, keep this to
yourself…a mini-minivan.
There, we’ve said it. Mazda calls
it a “multi-activity vehicle,” would never use the dreaded “M” word in referring
to it and won’t appreciate our doing it. But it’s a small three-row vehicle with
sliding rear doors. What would you call it?
“This segment doesn’t exist in the
U.S. market,” says Mazda Dealer
Affairs Manager Weldon Munsey, who was Mazda5’s vehicle line manager in his
previous job, “but it’s huge elsewhere.” In
Europe, he says, it amounts to 800,000 units, on its way
to more than a million.
The primary factor that sets
Mazda5 apart from anything else in
North
America is its seating for six, in three rows of two, combined with
its modest size. There are no other three-row vehicles this small (think
Chrysler Pacifica, Ford Freestyle, Subaru’s new B9 Tribeca) or small CUVs or
wagons this flexible, with reasonable room for six, or two and a lot of
stuff.
Since each individual second and
third row seat folds down flat for cargo, it’s can be a two-, three-, four,
five- or six-seater, depending on the mix of people and stuff you want to haul.
There are cargo bins under the second-row seats and a covered tray behind the
rears, but precious little room behind those third-row seats with their backs
up.
Because the second-row seats
adjust fore and aft, occupants can trade off legroom sufficiently for full-size
adults to ride reasonable comfortably in the far-back row, though we wouldn’t
recommend it for long rides. Each row is also about two inches higher than the
one in front (“stadium” seating), so everyone can see out the
front.
Sizing it
up
Though built on the compact Mazda3
platform and powertrain, this versatile wagon/van it is a bit larger than you
might expect. It’s the same width but roughly five inches longer and six inches
taller than the Mazda3 five-door (hatchback) on a four-inch longer, 108-inch
wheelbase. Total seats-down cargo capacity is 13 cubic feet better at 44.4 cu
ft.
The Mazda3-based suspension is
MacPherson struts front and multi-link independent rear, the latter designed to
help suppress cornering lean that might result from the vehicle’s relatively
tall height. Brakes are large four-wheel discs with vented front rotors, ABS and
Electronic Brake Force Distribution (EBD), while steering is electronic power
assisted rack and pinion. Given that one of Mazda’s strong points in recent
years has been well-tuned chassis dynamics (zoom-zoom), handling, braking, and
steering are not at all surprisingly good.
The nicely turned out instrument
panel has its center section raised for easy visibility and reach to HVAC,
audio, and other frequently used controls. Fits and materials throughout are as
good as anything in its price range and better than most. The large manual rear
doors slide open and closed with remarkably low effort for easy access to the
middle-row seats, which flip forward with a single motion for third-row ingress
and egress. Mazda adds standard front, front side, and three-row side curtain
airbags.
Priced to
move
We’ve saved powertrain for last
because it may be the only weak link in what is otherwise a very attractive,
versatile and enjoyable vehicle. Calibrated to trade three of the Mazda3’s 160
horses for a flatter torque curve, the same 2.3-liter 16-valve DOHC four that
seems so lively in the 2800-pound Mazda3 seems a bit overwhelmed by the Mazda5’s
500-plus additional pounds. We sampled it with both five-speed manual and
optional four-speed automatic transaxles with two normal-sized adults and no
cargo on board and found it, well, slow. Informal 0-60 runs with the automatic
were 11 seconds plus.
Not that such a practical,
utility-oriented vehicle needs to be fast. But we wondered if this powertrain’s
performance doesn’t fall somewhat short of Mazda’s “zoom-zoom” brand character
even at light load. And it certainly will with multiple passengers and/or heavy
cargo, especially uphill and at high altitudes. “Zoom-zoom isn’t just about
zero-to-60,” Munsey reminds us, “it’s the entire driving experience.” Yes,
but….
Mazda5 prices start at $17,995
(including destination charges) for the base Sport model with 17-inch alloy
wheels, AM/FM/CD stereo, cruise control, power windows and door locks. The
$19,510 Touring model adds automatic climate control, fog lamps, a power
moonroof, rear spoiler, side skirts, and uplevel audio with MP3 and in-dash
six-disc CD changer. The four-speed automatic goes for $900, the moonroof (on
the Sport) for $700 and a navigation system (on the Touring) for
$2000.
Asked whether there might be a
higher-performance version down the road — bigger tires, tighter suspenders and
maybe 50 more horses — Mazda North America marketing V.P. Don Romano said
probably not. Given the delightful zoom-zoom persona Mazda has worked so hard to
cultivate of late, they may want to rethink that. And they probably
are.
2006 Mazda5
Base price:
$17,435 (plus
$560 destination)
Engines:
2.3-liter 16-valve DOHC four, 157 hp/148 lb-ft
Transmission: Four-speed automatic,
front-wheel drive
Wheelbase: 108
in
Length x width x height: 181.5
x 69.1 x 63.6 in
Curb Weight:
3333 lb (five-speed manual Sport)
EPA (city/hwy): 22/27
mpg (five-speed manual); 21/26 mpg (four-speed auto)
Safety features: Front, front side and
three-row side curtain airbags, seatbelt pretensioners
Major standard features: 17-inch alloy
wheels, AM/FM/CD stereo, cruise control, power windows and door
locks
Warranty: Four years/50,000
miles