Understandable, I was just saying.
No issue!
Understandable, I was just saying.
It's refreshingly ... blunt, LOL.
Review watched:
He was clear-no need to buy this unless you have a 5 y.o. CX-5 and that's really the crux,i didn't consider a 6 as a second car because of same drivetrain. 120k or so is saturation point for mazda in sales figures.
I like my mazda but if I buy a new car every 5 years I don't want same engine with more sound deadening. I want more options and others do as well:
Electric with range extender (on cards), mazda hazumi (or whatever the concept car is called)
Hybrid (Toyota hybrid in a Mazda 3 with skyactiv)
Turbos
V6
7/8 speed automatic.
This is at best a dressed up 16.5 - good value for new buyers but meh if you think of MY continuation.
Another positive he said was repeatability over kia/Honda/ford turbos. In stop n go here in Texas the puny 1.5 turbo will repeatedly get hotter and weaker on a drive. Your throttle response won't be true. Add CVT and you get vague driving feel.
Depends on way more than you're focusing on. And VW didn't figure out crap, their 1.8T engine is a sludge bucket. Poor example.
BTW, my example was to be "different" from the current 2.5T platform...
Try the CX-9.
The old turbo recipe of using a low compression ratio and a lot of high RPM boost is what gave turbos a bad rap for so many years. Some car makers are still making turbos like this, Ford and Subaru to name two. Their current engines aren't as bad as they used to be, but they're still pretty lackluster except under full throttle acceleration. Under the rpm and throttle conditions where street engines spend 99% of their time, you aren't getting much advantage from the turbo. There's a lot of lag, responsiveness is poor, low rpm torque doesn't seem any better than a naturally aspirated engine of the same size, and real world fuel economy falls short of their ratings.
VW deserves credit for popularizing turbos with a flat torque curve. If you want to be impressed with a small turbo, drive a GTI with the 2.0T. It is really fun to drive, way more than anything Mazda offers. 250 lb-ft of torque from 1500 rpm up and minimal lag, so it feels like it has loads of grunt everywhere and downshifting is optional. Passing power in top gear is really strong. It's flat out quick too. And fuel economy is pretty good.
The 1.8T has been around for a long, long time and isn't going to win any drag races, but it is surprisingly capable of moving around a mid-size car with relative ease. The reason for that is there is boost available from the bottom of the rev range, so you can be cruising around in the 1500-2000 rpm range and when you start to push into the throttle there is torque right there without needing a downshift. It gives the impression of a bigger engine.
The comment that people with a year or two old CX-5 don't need to rush out and buy this is also related to his high regard for the current CX-5. The CX-5 came out in 2013. This is year 2017. The 2019-2020 most likely will have the power-train updates. I bet the 3 and 6 will get them first.
^ As someone who plans to keep it for a long while it's had some time to be proven / fine tuned and down the road it will be a relatively well known power train to service. Not a bad thing at all in my books.
It's slow, when passing at or above 70 mph, which is the new norm speed limit on our Texas highways.Agreed.
I don't get the issue with "performance" in this car. Perhaps I'm unique, but If I'm spending 30k for a performance vehicle, I can't imagine shopping a CUV. :dunno:
It's slow, when passing at or above 70 mph, which is the new norm speed limit on our Texas highways.
Agreed.
I don't get the issue with "performance" in this car. Perhaps I'm unique, but If I'm spending 30k for a performance vehicle, I can't imagine shopping a CUV. :dunno:
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I don't think the extra power and such being discussed is wanted just for "performance", but with a motto such as "Zoom Zoom", it couldn't hurt...
If "performance" is all that mattered, I have a $15k Honda that will ass **** your M4 in every performance category, but that's for fun, nothing else. No one is expecting that ever out of a $30k CUV, or at least I hope not...
I don't have problems passing anyone at high speeds.
I really don't understand. Maybe comparing to fast cars or something?
But it's still a Honda....that's cute my kids have hondas
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I think drivers on the autobahn or in Germany in general, are more lenient than drivers in Texas. I mean have you tried driving in Houston? LOL. In Houston, you've got to be decisive or you are not going to be able to switch lanes to get off the highway. You could slow down, but there's no guarantee the car behind you will give you the lane. This is less an issue driving in Dallas but I still want that extra power for when I need it. I also somewhat consider it a safety issue. If I'm passing an 18 wheeler, the less amount of time I spend beside it while passing, the safer I will be.I don't have any problems passing on the autobahn. It's not my M4, but it's adequate.
If you're trying to pass on blind curves or hill crests, well, I don't encourage that anyways.
I think drivers on the autobahn or in Germany in general, are more lenient than drivers in Texas. I mean have you tried driving in Houston? LOL. In Houston, you've got to be decisive or you are not going to be able to switch lanes to get off the highway. You could slow down, but there's no guarantee the car behind you will give you the lane. This is less an issue driving in Dallas but I still want that extra power for when I need it. I also somewhat consider it a safety issue. If I'm passing an 18 wheeler, the less amount of time I spend beside it while passing, the safer I will be.
I do think for 90% of my driving, the car has adequate amount of power. Once it's going, it is adequate. I think part of the issue is that it needs more power to go from cruising to brisk acceleration. Like it needs more power to overcome the inertia of being cruising. In its defense, other mainstream CUVs aren't any better really and most are even less responsive than the CX-5 when it comes to 70 mph highway passing power. Other than the Forester 2.0 XT or Escape with high power ecoboost engine that is.
I think drivers on the autobahn or in Germany in general, are more lenient than drivers in Texas. I mean have you tried driving in Houston? LOL. In Houston, you've got to be decisive or you are not going to be able to switch lanes to get off the highway. You could slow down, but there's no guarantee the car behind you will give you the lane. This is less an issue driving in Dallas but I still want that extra power for when I need it. I also somewhat consider it a safety issue. If I'm passing an 18 wheeler, the less amount of time I spend beside it while passing, the safer I will be.
I do think for 90% of my driving, the car has adequate amount of power. Once it's going, it is adequate. I think part of the issue is that it needs more power to go from cruising to brisk acceleration. Like it needs more power to overcome the inertia of cruising. In its defense, other mainstream CUVs aren't any better really and most are even less responsive than the CX-5 when it comes to 70 mph highway passing power. Other than the Forester 2.0 XT or Escape with high power ecoboost engine that is.
Sounds good, I'm looking forward to it. I should make my own video showing highway passing on our 2016 CX-5 as well just for comparison.I'll make a go pro video once the 17 gets here. Sport mode gives me the additional "oompf" when I need it, at least it did in my '16 CX-5
Sounds good, I'm looking forward to it. I should make my own video showing highway passing on our 2016 CX-5 as well just for comparison.
You better not be speeding, my son just showed me on FaceTime that its snowing in the Springs right now. [emoji50][emoji23]
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