Farewell to Mazda for now

lindsayt

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Mazda 5
We traded in our 2010 Mazda 5 last Wednesday on a VW Jetta Sportwagen TDI 6MT. This is the first time I've ever traded in a car before it was paid off, but it was worth substantially more than we owed and we weren't a good fit for the 5, I'm afraid. Not that it's a bad car, but it's inherently a compromise vehicle and it always struck me as delicate - engineered to be a lighter, lower-use car than it is. We had to replace tires, rotors and shocks much earlier than I would ever consider acceptable, and the low-profile tires caused us to have to repair two rims from Minnesota's potholed streets. It also seemed to hold up less well aesthetically to the normal exterior dings of city living and to the interior tasks of hauling kids and cargo - presumably the car's primary selling point and a disappointment. The gas mileage was also disappointing, as we never did better than 28 on the highway even when I was trying to do better, and its city mileage for real city dwellers was downright abysmal - under 20 most of the time.

With all that said, I will note that Mazdas hold their value *VERY* well: after 38 months and 40,000 miles we got 55% of our initial purchase price back in a dealer trade-in, even despite the stained and scratched interior; so while it was the first time we ever felt that we *should* replace a car before it was paid off, it also held value well enough that we got way more than we owed on it, so we *could* trade it in so early.

I like Mazda's design ethic, and I very much doubt that if we had bought a Mazda 3 or 6 we would be trading it in so soon - especially the old 6 wagon that was what I'd originally wanted and that could compete well against a Jetta Sportwagen. But for now, we're done. I didn't post here much but it was a great resource when I needed it.
 
Have you read up on the TDI HPFP failures? Before I bought the 5, the Sportwagen TDI was in the running until I read all the internet chatter about the failures. To be fair, the 5's ability to carry 6 passengers in a pinch and the sporty handling were also deciding factors.
 
Have you read up on the TDI HPFP failures? Before I bought the 5, the Sportwagen TDI was in the running until I read all the internet chatter about the failures. To be fair, the 5's ability to carry 6 passengers in a pinch and the sporty handling were also deciding factors.
Yes, it's a risk for sure - I read the entire thread on tdiclub before laying down my money. The 2013s have a misfueling-prevention device so at least I know we won't be the ones who cause it. According to the most trustworthy number I could find it's affecting about 0.5% of TDIs, and the cost to fix it is $8k. So I'll hope I'm in the 99.5%.
 
Yes, it's a risk for sure - I read the entire thread on tdiclub before laying down my money. The 2013s have a misfueling-prevention device so at least I know we won't be the ones who cause it. According to the most trustworthy number I could find it's affecting about 0.5% of TDIs, and the cost to fix it is $8k. So I'll hope I'm in the 99.5%.

The numbers are definitely in your favor. I simply wasn't willing to take that risk on a know problem, no matter how low. You may want to consider a fuel additive, because one theory holds that the lubricity of diesel available in the US is lower than in Europe. Of course, that could get costly and be of questionable benefit.
 
VW has also tried to tell owners that they've filled up with "low quality" fuel, so if I were you I'd use only well known gas station brands and keep all my receipts. It's a little bit of work but it might work in your favor if things go bad down the road. I, too, love the Jetta Sportwagen and it was a tough choice on it or the 5. In many ways I think the Sportwagen is better, but obviously I ended up with a 5.
 
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