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Tokyo Report: New Real-World MPV Inviting but Otherworldly Senku Enticing
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Well, weve seen all there was to see at the 39th annual Tokyo Motor Show that took place back in late October, and one of the few companies we have yet to mention is also one of my favorites, despite its annoying "Zoom, Zoom" marketing slogan: Mazda.
Mazda had several vehicles at the show, ranging from a cozy, production-ready MPV, a pair of hydrogen-burning vehicles, and the gem of the bunch, an all-out flaming concept called the Senku.
While Im itching like a helpless kid with poison ivy to tell you all about the Senku and its flying doors, Mazda has a few other vehicles
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| While Im itching like a helpless kid with poison ivy to tell you all about the Senku and its flying doors, Mazda has a few other vehicles and technologies on display that deserve some attention. (Photo: Mazda Motor of America) |
Lets start with the real and move slowly and progressively onto the more imaginative and surreal. First, Mazda went and quietly did what GM and others spent hundreds of millions trying and pretty much
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| Mazda went and quietly did what others have spent hundreds of millions trying and pretty much failing to do: build a more stylish minivan. (Photo: Mazda Motor of America) |
As I was saying, Mazda,
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| The roof, in profile, angles mildly downward, helping the MPV achieve that Mazda raciness, or at least as much as can be gotten out of a minivan. (Photo: Mazda Motor of America) |
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| Mazdas new 2.3-liter turbocharged engine is a real powerhouse. (Photo: Mazda Motor of America) |
Unlike Nissan, Mazda has not gone overboard separating the greenhouse from the rest of the body, as the shoulders dissipate into the glass above the vans waistline. The roof, in profile, angles mildly downward, helping the MPV achieve that Mazda raciness, or at least as much as can be gotten out of a minivan. While this is the MPV planned for launch in Japan, no word yet as to whether it will be adapted in size or styling for European and North American markets
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| A limited number of Mazda RX-8 coupes equipped with rotary engines that burn hydrogen will hit the streets in Japan. (Photo: Mazda Motor of America) |
My favorite new technology is Mazdas new 2.3-liter turbocharged engine. Mazda likes to call it the MZR 2.3 DISI Turbo, and while it is a conventional inline four, no hybrids, rotarys, or even variable valve
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| Mazda is currently working on a production version of the MX-Crossport that will be called the CX-7. (Photo: Mazda Motor of America) |
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| Premacy is the name given to Japanese market Mazda5s, but instead of its conventional 4-cylinder gasoline engine, this one comes in Hydrogen RE Hybrid form, boasting a hydrogen-burning rotary engine assisted by an electric motor. (Photo: Mazda Motor of America) |
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