Mazda was on the edge of new-wave styling when it unveiled the Mazda6
midsize sedan in 2014, hoping the sex appeal finally would swipe some
Camry/Accord/Fusion buyers.
Despite its much-improved appeal,
which generated much-improved sales, Mazda6 remains an afterthought
among midsize sedans, outsold nearly eight-to-one by the Honda Accord,
which seems most like the Mazda, and almost three-to-one by the
oft-overlooked Subaru Legacy.
The freshened 2016 version now is upon us, and the model's sales jumped 28% in February, the month it went on sale.
Mazda
wisely left the 2016's outsides almost untouched — modified grille area
and that's it — while attending to the interior with richer materials,
nicer dashboard and instruments.
Mazda
was on the edge of new-wave styling when it unveiled the Mazda6 midsize
sedan in 2014, hoping the sex appeal finally would swipe some
Camry/Accord/Fusion buyers. The 2016 updates left the styling mostly
untouched and focused on interior upgrades. (Photo: Mazda)
But as part of the interior upgrades, Mazda included a navigation
system that — for Test Drive, at least — worked poorly. A $200
aftermarket unit would work easier, better.
The only way we could
enter a destination, using either the voice command or by manually
selecting letters and numbers, was to go through the progression: State,
city, street, number, waiting between each for the system to absorb and
digest.
Mazda said it shouldn't work that way. In fact, it sent a
video showing the system responding to a voice speaking the entire
address conversationally, as a navi should work — leaving us puzzled
about the alternative navi reality we found. Should a modern system even
have a mode that requires the tedious entry that we faced?
Offering a manual mode makes sense. Requiring data entry in a strict manner doesn't.
Of course, if you don't use the navi to find destinations frequently, it's not a big deal.
Other gripes, none deal-breakers:
•Exterior
door handles: They feel cheap, as if you're operating a fragile plastic
piece, which undermines the car's upmarket persona. The door handle is
something you touch every time you use the car, so the impression it
gives reinforces itself through repetition.
•Back seat: Two
outboard spots are comfy, but the big floor hump remains in the middle.
We remember when the industry promised that front-wheel drive would
eliminate the hump— makes that spot hardly useful.
On the other hand:
•Engine:
Remarkably quick for its 184 hp rating, and fuel-efficient too. Our
rather rather rambunctious suburban thrash-about returned roughly 22 mpg
— which sounds bad against the 32 mpg city/highway combined rating. But
the ratings are they're unbelievable in the first place. And we drive
hard, in the second. At least we do if the car's any fun, which the 6
is.
Mazda takes the commendable approach of eschewing downsized
and turbocharged powerplants that are nearly universal now. It Instead,
continues to rely on a relatively large-displacement four-cylinder, but
as part of its ballyhooed Skyactiv technology it builds that engine with
an unusually high compression ratio. That means the pistons squeeze the
air tightly in the cylinders, emulating the packing-in of air that
turbos do. but without the additional turbo hardware and the chance
you'll have to fix it later at great expense.
High compression ratios or turbos once mean premium fuel. Neither does nowadays.
The Mazda6 engine sounds a bit coarse due to the high compression, but only a minor detail, especially once it's warm.
•Fuel
saving i-Eloop: It's optional rather than standard as we'd prefer. But
it saves fuel without the ugliness of the stop-start mechanisms that can
interrupt your driving pleasure.
Instead of shutting off the
engine at stoplights and the like, as stop-start does, i-Eloop generates
electricity when the car slows and brakes, as a hybrid does. Instead of
a hybrid's But there's no massive battery; pack to store juice i-Eloop
sends the electricity into a small storage device called a capacitor. It
holds enough to run the lights or climate control briefly, taking that
load off the engine and enabling it to use less fuel.
It's worth 2 mpg in government ratings. We didn't have a chance to directly compare Mazda6s cars with and without.
•Noise:
Not much, which was Mazda's a goal in the freshening. But still we
noticed what seemed like unusual amounts of tire nose on a variety of
asphalt and concrete paving. Check where you usually drive before you
sign the papers, to be sure you're not buying annoyance.
If you
consider midsize four-door sedans to be simply family cars, you're
probably not a Mazda6 buyer. If you see no reason why usefulness and
family-friendliness need to conflict with good driving behavior, you're a
candidate.
Mazda6 Highlights:
• Style: Very sexy.•
•Engine: Fun, fuel-efficient
•Interior: Nicer, as intended.
2016 Mazda6 Details:
•What? Updates — mainly inside — to a recently redesigned mid-size, four-door, front-drive sedan.
•When? 2016 went on sale in February.
•How much?
Starts at $22,315 including $820 shipping for base Sport, manual
transmission. Top model, Grand Touring with automatic, starts at
$31,015.
Test car, Grand Touring automatic, with optional Technology Package ($2,180) and other, minor options was $33,395.
•Where? Made at How, Japan.
•What makes it go?
2.5-liter four-cylinder gasoline engine rated 184 horsepower at 5,700
rpm and 185 pounds-feet of torque at 3,250 rpm, available with manual or
automatic six-speed transmission.
•How big? Very close to Honda Accord.
Weighs 3,179 lbs. (manual transmission), 3,250 lbs. (automatic)
Passenger compartment, 99.7 cubic feet.; trunk, 14.8 cu. ft.
Turning circle diameter 36.7 feet.
•How thirsty? Manual rated 25 mpg in city driving, 37 highway, 29 in combined city/highway.
Automatic rated 26/38/30, or 28/40/32 with i-Eloop fuel-saving option.
High-end,
automatic-transmission test car with i-Eloop delivered 22.1 mpg (4.52
gallons per 100 miles) in broad mix of driving, much of it quite
vigorous.
Burns regular. Tank holds 16.4 gal.
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