2020 Mazda CX-30Derek McNaughton / Driving What is it?By now, its a universal truth that we Canadians are hungry for SUVs and crossovers. Well, Mazda wants to satisfy our appetites with the CX-30, a new crossover slotting between the CX-3 and CX-5, at the Los Angeles Auto Show.Why does it matter?The CX-5 is, without a doubt, Mazdas bread-and-butter crossover. So, its easy to see why theyd want to capitalize on the success after all, its hands-down Mazdas best-seller. Problem is, the CX-5 can be a bit too big for some buyers enter the CX-3, right? Well, that ones a bit too tight, particularly in the rear seat and cargo area.This is where the CX-3 comes into play. Not quite as big as the CX-3 yet not quite as tight as the CX-5, consider the CX-30 as the Goldilocks. From the outside, the CX-30 is essentially a restyled CX-5 with a sleeker roofline its genuinely attractive, embracing Mazdas Kodo design language with a thin and wide grille, slim headlights, and some clever contouring in the sheet metal thats not quite visible to the naked eye until certain light and reflections happen to hit the sides just right.Check out all of our latest auto show coverage hereInside, the CX-30 is immediately familiar. Sharing an overall interior layout with the Mazda3, fit-and-finish is absolutely impeccable. An 8.8-inch display handles infotainment duties, while a seven-inch digital display in the gauge cluster is standard. Naturally, Apple CarPlay and Android Auto connectivity are standard, and Mazda offers its latest suite of active safety features are available blind-spot monitoring and rear cross-traffic alert is standard on the base GX, but youll have to step up to the mid-level GS if you want goodies like adaptive cruise control, forward-collision alert, and lane-keep assist, among others. The GT adds a couple of new tricks up its sleeve in this department, including rear automatic braking. The CX-30 adds knee airbags for the driver and front passenger, too.The only slight disappointment with the CX-30 is the powertrain lineup. Its a carbon copy of the Mazda3, meaning the 2.0-litre SkyActiv inline-four is standard, good for 155 horsepower and 150 lb.-ft. of torque. If thats not enough kick, Mazdas 2.5L four-banger is available, good for 186 horsepower and 186 lb.-ft. of torque. Both powertrains are hooked up to a six-speed automatic, and all-wheel-drive is available.Now, theres nothing inherently wrong with this powertrain lineup Mazdas G-Vectoring Control is standard fare, and the company has paid extra attention to quashing noise, vibration, and harshness, so you can bet itll ride well but youd think the CX-30 wouldve debuted for North America with Mazdas trick SkyActiv-X engine. When is it coming?The Mazda CX-30 is hitting U.S. dealers next month, followed by Canada in January. The CX-30 starts at $23,950 for a base, front-wheel-drive GX and tops out at $33,850 for the fully loaded GT.Should you buy it?Good question. The CX-30 is priced well, generously equipped, and the interior is impeccable. And given its a Mazda, you can bet itll be among the more engaging crossovers in the segment. If the CX-5 is too big, the CX-3 is too tight, and the Mazda3 hatch doesnt fit the bill, the CX-30 is just
Origin: 2020 Mazda CX-30 splits the difference between the CX-3 and CX-5
CX-5
SUV Review: 2019 Mazda CX-5 Skyactiv-D
2019 Mazda CX-5 Skyactiv-DChris Balcerak To paraphrase the immortal Patty Duke, I think that automotive sales success, like successful relationships, requires more than a little good luck, good fortune and, most especially, good timing.Unfortunately, six years ago when Mazda Canada originally wanted to introduce its first diesel to North America, it had none of the first, precious little of the second and, if it is at all possible, it’s timing was even worse than AIG’s famed $1,000-a-night retreat just weeks after it received its infamous $85 billion bail-out.Making a short story long, Mazda has wanted to bring a compression-ignition engine to Canada for quite some time. The company prides itself on its ability to wring more kilometres out of a litre than pretty much anyone else, so it was natural, logical even, that they’d eventually look to fuel-sipping diesel technology to shore up its low consumption bona fides.Unfortunately — and I’m not sure if this falls under bad luck or bad fortune — Mazda is a prideful company. So, when Volkswagen announced that it could meet North American emissions standards without resorting to urea injection — officially called selective catalytic reduction — the company’s engineers were determined to prove that its engineers, the equal of any from Germany, could do so as well. Well, as we all know, Volkswagen’s technological Holy Grail turned out to be an illusion, Dieselgate knocking not only Volkswagen, but the future of diesels — nay, all of internal combustion — for a loop. Mazda had been chasing a pipe dream, its delay not only unwarranted but unnecessary.All of which begs the question of whether Mazda’s decision to bring its Skyactiv-D — again, some six years later than first anticipated — is a worthwhile addition to its lineup or just more we’ll-show-you-what-we-can-do hubris.The short answer, at least to those that have a predilection to both Mazdas and diesels is an only slightly qualified yes. In fact, my initial evaluation is that the new 2.2-litre oil burner is a better “premium” powertrain than the Signature’s version of the 2.5-litre gas-fed turbo that’s garnered so much praise as of late. Yes, the diesel sacrifices horsepower — the oil burner claims but 168 ponies while the Signature’s 2.5-litre gas-fed Turbo boasts 227 hp (250 hp on premium gas). But what it sacrifices in top-end revvability, it more than makes up for in comportment, the 2.2-litre SkyActiv-D’s 290 pound-feet of torque at 2,000 rpm further proof of the benefits of the high compression needed to self-ignite diesel fuel. Whether it was passing a long semi on the highway or scooting away from a stoplight a little more quickly than John Law recommends, I never found the Skyactiv-D to be short on power. Horsepower may make supercars fast, but torque renders ordinary vehicles peppy. That diesel grunt also allows the SkyActiv-D version of the CX-5 to tow more — 1,586 kilograms (3,500 lb) versus 907 kg (2,000 lb) — than the nominally more powerful 2.5L Turbo gas engine. It’s also a pretty sophisticated engine, noticeably quieter than comparable small diesels, but still a bit of ignition “clatter.” It is well contained and doesn’t detract in the slightest from the CX-5’s demeanour. And the fact that the Skyactiv-D doesn’t have the rush of power of the gasoline engine’s turbocharger coming on stream, the diesel’s more tempered throttle response makes the drive that much more relaxing. Mated to the rest of the CX-5 Signature’s attributes — an uncommonly luxurious interior for this segment, G-Vectoring Control and a stylish exterior — there’s something more “grown up” about the diesel CX-5, an attribute the 2.5L version was somehow missing.As for a diesel’s long suit, once again methinks that Lady Luck is not smiling on Mazda’s oil-burning SkyActiv. Ever since its testing oversights were exposed by the Volkswagen fiasco, the EPA has been insistently diligent in their testing of anything lacking a spark plug. Ditto its partner in crime… oops, I mean emissions reduction, Transport Canada. Officially, then, the CX-5 is rated at 7.9 L/100 km on the highway. If you’re thinking that seems a trifle extravagant for a diesel — it’s exactly the same rating the government gives the base, non-turbocharged 2.5-litre CX-5 — you’re not alone. I certainly expected a lower rating, something in the region of 6.5 or, at worst, 7 flat. Well, coincidentally, those 7.9 L/100 km is exactly what I recorded in the Skyactiv-D CX-5 while averaging an OPP-baiting 125 km/h on Ontario’s relatively flat 401, Cruising at a more representative — of both real-world use and also official testing — 110 km/h, fuel consumption was about another litre per 100 klicks lower. I’m not sure why the little 2.2L didn’t do better in Transport Canada’s testing, but, despite a seemingly unfavourable rating, the Skyactiv-D does produce the economies promised by diesel technology.Where those economies fall a
Origin: SUV Review: 2019 Mazda CX-5 Skyactiv-D
2019 Mazda CX-5 finally gets a diesel for North America
2019 Mazda CX-5 dieselHandout / Mazda What is it? Mazda’s long-awaited diesel finally arrives in Canada. Why does it matter? Mazda has been trying to bring its oil-burner to our shores for years. There’s been all sorts of theories — I’m not sure if they actually qualify as conspiracies — as to its long delay: a lack of performance, not enough reliability or simply not enough production capacity. My personal theory is that Mazda wanted to emulate what they thought was Volkswagen’s ability — illusory, as it turns out — to reduce NOx emissions without having to inject urea into the engine. If VW could do it, surely so could the engineers from Hiroshima. We know how that story ended. Whatever the reason for the delay, Mazda swears its 2.2-litre turbodiesel is really coming this time and it will first appear in the Signature version of its compact CX-5 crossover. Said Skyactiv-D is said to pump out 168 horsepower and an even more stout 290 lb.-ft. of torque, while sipping fuel at a pretty-darned-low-for-an-SUV 8.5 L/100 kilometres overall. Sensing some hesitance amongst potential buyers, Mazda devoted an entire paragraph of its press release to meeting North American emissions regulations, noting that it adopts “special combustion control software and exhaust treatment to meet the strictest emissions regulations” and that the company “worked closely with all proper federal and state agencies in the U.S., such as the EPA and CARB, to ensure the Skyactiv-D 2.2 engine passes all appropriate regulations.” Paranoid much? When is it coming? Possibly later this summer, if summer ever arrives. Officially, all Mazda says is the second half of 2019. Should you buy it? I drove an early version of the Skyactiv-D 2.2 some years ago and it was an impressive piece of kit, free revving for a diesel and plenty torque, to boot. One presumes it has only gotten better in the ensuing three or four years. Better late than never, I suppose, and I suspect that if the Skyactiv-D proves popular in this little crossover, we’ll see it in other “Signature” Mazdas as
Origin: 2019 Mazda CX-5 finally gets a diesel for North America
SUV Comparison: 2019 Mazda CX-5 Signature vs Lexus NX300 F Sport
David Booth: At first blush, this comparison didn’t seem fair at all. After all, the NX300 is the spawn of Lexus’ RX, the best-selling Asian luxury SUV in Canada, while the CX-5 is, well, a Mazda, a marque hardly renowned for its leather and wood trim. I was going to mention the silliness of such a comparison, but Mazda recently introduced a Signature version of its hot-selling, mid-priced crossover with turbocharged engine liberated from the upscale CX-9. The hot-rodded 2.5-litre four boasts 250 horsepower — when juicing on 93 octane; 227 hp when feeding on the low-grade stuff — which is actually 15 more ponies than the more expensive NX300 can manage. Game on. Jonathan Yarkony: Makes sense, right? I keep thinking of the Mazda CX-5 relative to mainstream cute utes like the Honda CR-V and Subaru Forester and find that while it drives well and is luxurious on a level they don’t even approach, it’s just short on practicality and value. Buuuuut, if we set it against something from the luxury segment, which is not known for generous cargo, it would be interesting to see just how far Mazda has come in terms of luxury and whether this Signature trim and that engine truly take it to the next level. Now, we could have compared it to an X3 or Q5, but those would probably cost $30K more for the same features, so that’s a little ridiculous. Plus, I couldn’t get past the irony of it – for years we would look at the pricing and say, “Why spend $60K on the German option when you can get all the same stuff and usually better practicality and definitely better reliability in a Lexus?” Well, looks like Lexus needs to start looking over its shoulder with Genesis coming to the luxury market, but right here, right now, Mazda is absolutely creeping in on the luxury class in a way that Buick and Acura have failed to do. DB: I will grant you that Mazda, in general, and the CX-5, in particular, has come a long way. Besides the upgrade in power, the Signature is also more luxurious inside, the Cocoa Napa leather supple, the Abachi wood decorous and the 10-speaker Bose sound system sonorous. But there remains, in those parts of the cabin that are not easily upgraded, a middle-classness, if you will, to the CX-5. The infotainment screen, for instance, is tiny, almost an afterthought. And the rearview back-up monitor is just plain dated. The actual camera has the requisite pixels, but unlike virtually all modern backup cameras, it has no artificial lines reflecting your steering angle to show your projected path while you’re backing into a parking spot. Totally useless. I ended up reversing the old fashioned way: You know, using the bumpers as feelers. JY: Well, that’s reassuring remind me never to loan you my beloved personal car. But yeah, you’re right, the Lexus NX does have a pretty sweet parking system. Not only is there a standard rear view with guidelines, there is an excellent overhead 360º view, and parking sensors to make sure you don’t ding the luxurious dark beige paint. (Random tangent: C’mon Lexus, a crossover as funky and cool-looking as the NX deserves a better colour than this drab, blend-into-a-dreary-background grey.) But what I especially liked is that the front parking sensors automatically come online as you creep close to a garage wall or other frontal obstructions – visibility has become so difficult in modern crossovers, so every little bit of exacting parking assistance is appreciated. Also, you may have found some cheap plastics and materials where no one else looks, but Lexus’ flaws are front and centre, literally. The steering wheel leather is lovely to the touch, especially the perforated portions, but the seam is a travesty. The edges of the leather are exposed, so pretty much every time you touch the wheel – which I hope is always since I will go out on a limb and assume NX owners aren’t in the same phylum as Autopilot-testing idiot Tesla owners – you feel the rough edges and shoddy workmanship. You can stack a dozen analog clocks on your dash for all I care, but the constant contact with this poor finish undermines any claim to luxury. A shame, because I like the look of the funky Lexus interior, and the seats and materials are all on par with the class expectations. The infotainment system on the other hand. the Mazda’s screen may be small, but at least the controls are reasonably easy to use. The Lexus trackpad is pure frustration in its inconsistent responses and lack of accuracy. Adding insult to injury is the fact that the NX’s release dates back to when Toyota still resisted the supremacy of Apple CarPlay, but I’m sure that will be rectified in the near future. DB: The issue is that, when viewed on a specification sheet, the CX-5 looks to be in the NX’s league. Leather? Check. Back-up camera? Check. Even the powertrain is the same turbo-four cylinder with six-speed automatic transmission. At 250 horsepower — when fed 93 octane gas, at least — the CX-5 is more powerful than the Lexus.
Origin: SUV Comparison: 2019 Mazda CX-5 Signature vs Lexus NX300 F Sport