Test drove the new 2019 MX-5 today....

Test drove the new 2019 MX-5 today....

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Mario149

Original Poster:

7,754 posts

178 months

Tuesday 16th October 2018
quotequote all
....lovely bit of kit, well done Mazda smile

The 20bhp or so increase on the old model to 180-ish peaked my interest for a drive and I think it's now in the proper sweet spot. Car I drove was a GT Sport Nav+, which is a bit unnecessary, best to stick with the Sport Nav+and ditch the all inclusive "Safety Pack", rear spoiler and pricier tan leather (as opposed to standard leather) and save ~£1K. Although on the Sport I'd prob re-spec the tan leather for £200 as it looks good with the rest of the black interior and red exterior.

Car moved around a fair bit on the greasy roads even with warm tyres, lovely line tightening when you get on the power mid corner, heel and toe-able, short throw precise 'box, likes the redline (even when not run in so can only get better!) and it shows up everything that is wrong with modern turbo engines which is almost enough to sell it in itself. Great example of how 170bhp/tonne is great fun for the road even if you drive much pokier cars.

Only complaints are that the nose feels heavy compared to the 2004 MR2 we had a while back (kinda expected really as it's not mid-engined, but still....), needs a fruitier exhaust, and it doesn't like really fast gear changes as the revs drop to to slowly (heavy flywheel? engine a bit tight as it only had a couple of hundred miles on? who knows?)

Overall though, fab car at the price point if it's going to be your daily or a "do everything with no kids fun car". As a weekend car, you'd probably still prefer a used Elise for the same money assuming you can contort yourself into it and don't mind the rawness which is obvs not everyone's cup of tea.

All that said, even though we don't meet the criteria above, we are sorely tempted....!

coppice

8,599 posts

144 months

Wednesday 17th October 2018
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Rev hang comment intriguing as my 2015 ND 2litre has a very responsive engine when it comes to blips on throttle, with the feel of only a very light flywheel . Almost uniquely, as everything' normal' I've driven for years has had awful rev hang, none worse than on the otherwise brilliant 1litre Ecoboost .

Deep Thought

35,795 posts

197 months

Sunday 28th October 2018
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Mario149 said:
....lovely bit of kit, well done Mazda smile

The 20bhp or so increase on the old model to 180-ish peaked my interest for a drive and I think it's now in the proper sweet spot. Car I drove was a GT Sport Nav+, which is a bit unnecessary, best to stick with the Sport Nav+and ditch the all inclusive "Safety Pack", rear spoiler and pricier tan leather (as opposed to standard leather) and save ~£1K. Although on the Sport I'd prob re-spec the tan leather for £200 as it looks good with the rest of the black interior and red exterior.

Car moved around a fair bit on the greasy roads even with warm tyres, lovely line tightening when you get on the power mid corner, heel and toe-able, short throw precise 'box, likes the redline (even when not run in so can only get better!) and it shows up everything that is wrong with modern turbo engines which is almost enough to sell it in itself. Great example of how 170bhp/tonne is great fun for the road even if you drive much pokier cars.

Only complaints are that the nose feels heavy compared to the 2004 MR2 we had a while back (kinda expected really as it's not mid-engined, but still....), needs a fruitier exhaust, and it doesn't like really fast gear changes as the revs drop to to slowly (heavy flywheel? engine a bit tight as it only had a couple of hundred miles on? who knows?)

Overall though, fab car at the price point if it's going to be your daily or a "do everything with no kids fun car". As a weekend car, you'd probably still prefer a used Elise for the same money assuming you can contort yourself into it and don't mind the rawness which is obvs not everyone's cup of tea.

All that said, even though we don't meet the criteria above, we are sorely tempted....!
Funnily, we drove a GT Sport Nav+ on Friday and its the one we'd go for. LED lights, reversing cam and the Nappa leather seemed like value for the £1,000 or uplift.

Drove very well. Timing isnt quite right for us to get one just yet, but i'd say in six months or so it would be a viable option. We'd be looking an auto though as my wife has arthritis.

Bemusingly, the dealer would only offer £550 off the stupidly high list price of £29,700 or thereabouts with metallic paint (+£1000 contribution to the finance from Mazda if you used it), Told us there was no chance of any higher discount from anyone. Two mins on line and Drivethedeal, we sourced one for £3,300 off with the further £1,000 off if we took at the finance.

Mad it a more palatable £25,000 ish.

xu5

629 posts

157 months

Monday 29th October 2018
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I think the ND1 has a single mass flywheel and ND2 has dual mass flywheel, Which may turn out to be one thing that would detract from an ND2 compared to ND1.

CousinDupree

779 posts

67 months

Wednesday 31st October 2018
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OP Thanks for the review.

I've only driven an earlier ND 2ltr, which also did the rev hang thing. It's so frustrating given the lovely gear change and pedals setup for h&t.

The original ND really lacked any top end zing, so looking forward to trying this one.

Gilhooligan

2,214 posts

144 months

Tuesday 6th November 2018
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Sounds good. I really like the new mx5, although as usual, would benefit from being lowered imo. Regarding ‘rev hang’ isn’t that due to emissions control?

coppice

8,599 posts

144 months

Friday 9th November 2018
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Weird -my 2015 ND 2 litre zips up and down like a good 'un, with no discernible hang. Did later ones get worse ?