GOLLY G (some text hidden) --NONE--
By Jonathan Crouch
The Mazda3 takes a big step forward in fourth generation form. Jonathan Crouch looksat the e-SKYACTIV G petrol version.
Ten Second Reviewword count: 64
Mazda has always been a bit unconventional in its approach to automotive design. Except, historically at least, when it's come to arguably its most conventional model, the Mazda3 family hatchback. But all that changed with this fourth generation version. You can see at a glance that the styling's different from the norm and, with this improved e-SKYACTIV G petrol version, much else is too.
Backgroundword count: 165
Think of a car of this type as good to drive as a Ford Focus, as good inside as a Volkswagen Golf and as good to look at as an Alfa Romeo Giulietta. That's what Mazda was aiming at. As for what we've got, well there's quite a lot. The fact that the 2.0-litre 'Skyactive-G' petrol engine we're going to look at here ignores turbocharging is another break with current convention, though Mazda has followed the current trend towards part-electrified mild hybrid technology for it. All of this engineering's bolted to a notably stiff SKYACTIV platform. And, the trend with previous Mazdas for slinky styling to clothe rather dull cabin design has been broken in this BP-generation post-2019-era model with what might just be the nicest interior in the segment. Add in standard equipment features you'd have to pay extra for on rivals and plenty of camera-driven safety kit and you've a promising-sounding package offered either in hatch form or as a smartly styled saloon.
Driving Experienceword count: 248
Keen drivers will know what we're talking about when we say that some family hatchbacks seem to want to fight your inputs and are a bit of a battle to drive, whereas others just work in harmony with you. This Mazda3 is one of the latter. There's an auto option but in a manual version, you'll notice the lovely 'wrist-flick' feel of the stick shift change, which is complemented by feelsome steering, positive brakes - and decent ride quality too, despite this fourth generation model's shift away from independent rear suspension to a theoretically cruder torsion beam arrangement. The stiffer body also helps (contributing to exceptional cruising refinement). And in addition, there's also 'G-Vectoring Control Plus', a standard torque vectoring system that also takes steering inputs into account as it transfers traction to the wheels that can best use it at speed through the bends. You'll want to know about engines. If you select the base Skyactiv-G petrol unit with light M Hybrid assistance that most Mazda3 buyers are expected to choose, the performance feels extremely modest. Which is surprising when you consider that it's 2.5-litres in size. This isn't really down to the 140PS output - that's about par for the course with a base petrol powerplant in a car of this kind. It's more about the fact that Mazda refuses to fit turbochargers to its petrol engines, so rather counter-intuitively you get less mid-range pulling power than a Ford or Volkswagen engine of half the capacity.
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Pictures (high res disabled)
Statistics (subset of data only)
Min |
Max |
|
Price: |
£24,010.00 (At 7 Aug 2024) |
£30,755.00 (At 7 Aug 2024) |
CO2 (g/km): |
141 (auto) |
133 (manual) |
Max Speed (mph): |
124 (auto) |
128 (manual) |
0-62 mph (s): |
9.8 (auto) |
9.5 (manual) |
Combined Mpg: |
44.8 (auto) |
47.1 (manual) |
Length (mm): |
4460 |
|
Width (mm): |
1795 |
|
Height (mm): |
1435 |
|
Boot Capacity (l): |
351 |
450 |
... and 2 other stats available |
Scoring (subset of scores)
Category: Compact Family Cars
Performance | |
Handling | |
Comfort | |
Space | |
Styling, Build, Value, Equipment, Depreciation, Handling, Insurance and Total scores are available with our full data feed. |