Sluggish accelaration

hello there!
I recently bought 2018 Mazda cx-5 , 2.5L Petrol (85,000km), but noticing the accelaration is sluggish 0-50kmph , but after reaching 50km speed it is smooth accelaration. feeling difficult with merging onto highways unless im really pressing the accelarator hard (both hot and cold days - anytime). what can be done?
 
They are a little sluggish off the line but perform better on the highway. If you can learn how to use the power band it might help you achieve a more acceptable ride
 
They are a little sluggish off the line but perform better on the highway. If you can learn how to use the power band it might help you achieve a more acceptable ride
I find the exact opposite. Off the line performance with the 2.5, FWD is impressively quick, but only adequate at highway speeds.
 
hello there!
I recently bought 2018 Mazda cx-5 , 2.5L Petrol (85,000km), but noticing the accelaration is sluggish 0-50kmph , but after reaching 50km speed it is smooth accelaration. feeling difficult with merging onto highways unless im really pressing the accelarator hard (both hot and cold days - anytime). what can be done?
Do you have an engine light?
 
I find the exact opposite. Off the line performance with the 2.5, FWD is impressively quick, but only adequate at highway speeds.
Well I a CX-50 AWD the extra weight may mean a difference. However I cruise pretty easily on the highway achieving 80 to 100 . Not that I typically drive that fast 😉
 
Well I a CX-50 AWD the extra weight may mean a difference. However I cruise pretty easily on the highway achieving 80 to 100 . Not that I typically drive that fast 😉
Yes true. Pre facelifted FWD Mazda 6, CX5 is 3200lb-3400lb. At this weight, and without the driveline loss inducing, heavy AWD system to lug around behind you, these cars can be quick off the line.
 
hello there!
I recently bought 2018 Mazda cx-5 , 2.5L Petrol (85,000km), but noticing the accelaration is sluggish 0-50kmph , but after reaching 50km speed it is smooth accelaration. feeling difficult with merging onto highways unless im really pressing the accelarator hard (both hot and cold days - anytime). what can be done?

Same here. IF I am sedately using the throttle.

But if I keep the RPMs at the shift points in the 4000-5000rpm range, the car moves right along. In the "Sport" mode and manual shifting, there's not much sluggishness, particularly if the RPMs at the shifts are kept high.

There are a couple of steeper on-ramps to the highway, where I live, where I'm putting my life in the hands of every car coming along ... if I fail to get up to speed quickly. And so, it's "Sport" mode and manual shifting with shifts over 5000rpms, to ensure any lollygaggers in the RH lane aren't much of an issue and I can merge-in easily. Makes all the difference, even uphill on such steeper onramps.

Something to try.


Also, at more than 50Kmi, it's high time to do a deep cleaning on the throttle body assembly, to ensure there isn't any crud affecting easy operation of the butterfly panel inside the throttle body. If you've experienced the car's aggressive attempts to shift in order to squeeze out the last ounce of fuel economy, you might find that much less pedal effort is required for the car to downshift. Helps to be a bit more assertive with the throttle when you actually intend to quickly accelerate, instead of helping the car to learn you're completely willing to sedately dodder along with it shifting down to ~1300rpms or so at every opportunity. (I hate that aspect of the car, but with a 'nimble' throttle it's easy enough to jump down a gear for more-brisk acceleration when preferred.
 
Here are the weight differences for the ‘15 CX-5 (US Market)
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If you've experienced the car's aggressive attempts to shift in order to squeeze out the last ounce of fuel economy, you might find that much less pedal effort is required for the car to downshift. Helps to be a bit more assertive with the throttle when you actually intend to quickly accelerate, instead of helping the car to learn you're completely willing to sedately dodder along with it shifting down to ~1300rpms or so at every opportunity. (I hate that aspect of the car, but with a 'nimble' throttle it's easy enough to jump down a gear for more-brisk acceleration when preferred.

I find the exact same behaviour on mine.

I think after a combination of becoming a more conservative and attentive driver, along with an aging drivetrain, I've become much more aware of the factory tuned shift points. You don't really have much choice but to follow it, unless you want to deal with the finicky torque convert lock/unlock strategy that's so glaringly apparent over in the manual mode. My 2015 doesn't have a sport mode.

Despite the precision tuned chassis and steering, and a drivetrain that's tuned to confidently and assertively hustle it's way into (or through...) traffic when demanded, at the end of the day, it's still an economy car. However, the shift points are too conservative, and it's largely to meet emissions/fuel economy regulations. My biggest gripe is that the automatic transmission refused to downshift until bottoming out at the bare minimum allowable rpm for the gear you're currently in. It's kind of ridiculous.

I use manual mode to hold gears for longer before Inevitably abiding by the drivetrains persistent shift strategy and shoving the transmission into the lowest gear allowable for the speed im going.

Note: the shift points are largely dependent on transmission fluid temp (viscosity.) if the drivetrain is warm and you're driving in hot weather, the transmission has no issue letting you hold that gear.

Yes the transmission is stubborn, but it's also smart. If you're in manual mode holding gears higher than what it prefers for some logical reason, such as a combination of warm weather, higher engine load and rolling hills, shift back over into drive and you might notice that the transmission will follow your lead and continue with this slightly more lenient shift points. Temporarily.

Otherwise, you just need to forcefully shove the throttle and basically disregard the drivetrains tuning or use manual mode to avoid it.

In the end, I'm done with automatics and their somewhat ridiculous shift points and complex torque convert lockup strategies. My next car will be a manual.
 
I think after a combination of becoming a more conservative and attentive driver, along with an aging drivetrain, I've become much more aware of the factory tuned shift points. You don't really have much choice but to follow it, unless ...

That's one thing about the CX-5's. The transmission learns and apparently makes some adjustments based on one's own particular driving patterns.

I've got old injuries that more or less necessitate an automatic transmission. Otherwise, I would exclusively own manual-shift vehicles. Like you, I dislike the inappropriate decisions that A/T's can often make. When they're tuned for fuel economy particularly. Overall, I'd like more control of situations as I deem appropriate. Still, in my case, a solid A/T isn't a bad thing.

I don't blame you for determining to "go manual" for your next vehicles. On the plus side, too, it'll be a Gen Z passive security device, for many of the up-and-coming boosters out there. Who'd have thought, when we were growing up, that people would basically never be taught how to drive/shift such cars. One of the amazements with current culture's trajectory.
 
hello there!
I recently bought 2018 Mazda cx-5 , 2.5L Petrol (85,000km), but noticing the accelaration is sluggish 0-50kmph , but after reaching 50km speed it is smooth accelaration. feeling difficult with merging onto highways unless im really pressing the accelarator hard (both hot and cold days - anytime). what can be done?
After I changed my battery my acceleration off the line was more responsive. It gradually got worse again over the following year I think. I believe it adapts to your behavior and if you normally accelerated slowly it will start in a higher gear, then lose time if you have to downshift.

I commute in traffic so often its pretty gradual acceleration.
 
After I changed my battery my acceleration off the line was more responsive. It gradually got worse again over the following year I think. I believe it adapts to your behavior and if you normally accelerated slowly it will start in a higher gear, then lose time if you have to downshift.

I commute in traffic so often its pretty gradual acceleration.

There's no way a battery could improve your acceleration times.

These cars always start in first gear unless you change to second in manual mode.
 

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