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June 18, 2012

Review: Mazda 5 / Mazda Premacy

The Mazda 5 offers a roomy ride for those families who need more than five seats but don't want or need something as large as a minivan. This compact MPV has recently been updated with sweeping lines on the sides, spanning a practical sliding door. Seating six (in the US), access to the third row is through an opening between the second-row seats.

The Mazda USA website tactfully refers to that opening as "elbow room", but perhaps Mazda have simply figured that Americans' expanding girth precludes seating three across the second row. Which is a loss to those American families who do have lanky children (and there are still plenty of us): for that opening in the middle can easily accomodate a seventh seat.

Indeed, the seventh seat is offered in those markets deemed by Mazda to either have slimmer populations and/or people who are used to having less need for personal space (ever been in the Tokyo subway at rush hour? A reference to "sardines" would be a vast understatement). In Japan, where the Mazda 5 is called the Premacy, the configuration is called the "6+One" seat concept: click on the photo to see the re-configuration in action.

Will the seventh seat be a comfortable long-distance place for your biceps-endowed high school quarterback? -No. But for a younger child (or a very, very large teddy bear): sure.

A friend of mine, who is a mom of three (including a cello player and a violin player) tells me that should her youngest child decide to take up the cello also, there is space in the back for an additional cello in the back of her Mazda 5, even with third row up.

As usual, the US offer (choice? what choice?) has the largest engine of them all: a 2.5L, 16-valve job that is reported by its users to get 26 mpg on average. The smart automatic transmission has something called "adaptive shift logic" that gets the same fuel efficiency as a manual version (the auto version does have a higher price tag). Customers in Japan are offered a 2.0L gasoline engine with stop-start technology called i-STOP; its estimated real-life fuel economy is about 30 mpg.

In Europe, the choices are three: 2.0L and 1.8L gasoline engines, and a 1.6L diesel that gets the highest fuel efficiency: 39 mpg in real life, while putting out the highest torque: 199 lb-ft (diesel engines do that).

In the UK, the diesel is £ 1,300 ($ 2,000) more expensive than the 2.0L gasoline version; my guesstimate is that, if sold in the US, it would have about the same price tag as the one with the 2.5L gasoline engine available here now. (No, it would not cost close to $40,000 as suggested by the table below: UK prices include a hefty tax, while the on-the-road price in the US is close to the net price - cars are cheap here).

I know a few moms - and dads - who would jump at the chance to drive a seven-seater that does 39 mpg. Parents: why don't you ask Mazda to sell you the gas sipper version(s) of the Mazda 5 you know and love?

 

Mazda 5 / Mazda Premacy

Mazda 5 (US) Premacy (JP) Mazda 5 (UK)
Type Sport
6 seats
20E i-STOP
6+One
1.6 TS2 Diesel
6+One
Year 2012 2012 2012
Emissions rating T2B5 / LEVII EURO5 "E"
MSRP $ 19,625 ¥ 1,960,000
($ 24,900)
£ 20,660
($ 32,500)
CelloMom Rating
Fuel Economy:
City/Hwy quoted 21 / 28 mpg    
Avg. quoted   33 mpg (JC08)
166 g CO2/km
45 mpg
138 g CO2/km
Avg. actual 26 mpg 30 mpg est. 39 mpg
Engine

2.5L DOCH
4-cyl 16v

2.0L 1.6L MZ-CD
Power 157HP
@6000rpm
148HP
@6200rpm
113HP
@3600rpm
Torque


163 lb-ft
@4000rpm

186Nm
137 lb-ft
@4500rpm
270 Nm
199 lb-ft
@1750rpm
Transmission VVT Auto or
6-spd Manual
5-spd Manual 6-spd Manual
Fuel Unleaded reg. Unleaded Diesel
Length, mm(in) 180.5in 4585mm  
Width, mm(in) 68.9in 1750mm  
Height, mm(in) 63.6in 1615mm  
Weight, kg(lbs) 3417lbs 1500 kg 1490 kg
Trunk volume, liters(cuft) 44.4cuft
3rd row down
   
Turning radius, m(ft) 36.7 ft c-c    
Top speed, kph(mph)     111 mph

 

4 comments:

  1. Wow ... I had no idea that US offerings were the least fuel efficient of the versions being made. Maybe we all need to start asking US dealers to give us the "good stuff". Thanks for this review!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Small Footprints,
      Sadly, we in the US tend to get tossed the largest and guzzliest models by just about all carmakers. You are right, time to visit some dealers and start pushing for some gas sippers!

      Delete
  2. what a great overview. i would jump at chance of mazda 5 w/ 4wd, seating 6 (or 7 - really keen). anyone know what canada offers... same as u.s.?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, Canadian options offered are the same as those in the US ( http://mazda.ca/ ). Imagine if Canada had Euro-like options: there'd be a run across the border, and a trade war.

      Delete

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