1990 Mazda Mx-5 Miata 2d Convertible on 2040-cars
Engine:--
Fuel Type:Gasoline
Body Type:Convertible
Transmission:--
For Sale By:Dealer
VIN (Vehicle Identification Number): 00000000000000000
Mileage: 119534
Make: Mazda
Trim: 2D Convertible
Drive Type: 2dr Coupe Convertible
Features: --
Power Options: --
Exterior Color: White
Interior Color: --
Warranty: Unspecified
Model: MX-5 Miata
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Mazda's next-gen SkyActiv engines will drop spark plugs in favor of high compression
Mon, Jan 16 2017Homogeneous charge compression ignition, or HCCI, is the black art of internal combustion engines that aims to produce diesel-like fuel efficiency for the cost of gasoline. Although some of its competitors have developed and subsequently given up on the tech, Mazda confirmed that the next-generation of SkyActiv engines will employ HCCI technology, improving fuel economy by 30 percent and at the same time reducing exhaust emissions. According to Nikkei, a new SkyActiv family of engines is set to debut under the hood of the next-gen Mazda3 sometime in 2018 before making its way into other vehicles. In simple terms, an engine that uses HCCI burns the air/fuel mix using pressure instead of with spark plugs, just like a diesel. At 14:1, Mazda's gasoline engines already have some of the highest compression ratios out there, but a move to HCCI means cranking up the compression to 18:1. While the tech sounds relatively straightforward, using HCCI means dealing with a number of side issues. It's one of those "on paper" ideas that compounds problems when put into practice. Heat, revs, and fuel must all be carefully managed as gasoline doesn't burn the same way as diesel. Mazda is mum on details, but the automaker seems confident that the issues have been sorted. If the new engines do indeed make it to market with HCCI, Mazda will have out-engineered GM, Daimler, and Hyundai, all of which have tried and failed to develop HCCI engines in a cost-effective package. With the market moving towards electrification, it's interesting to see Mazda still focusing so heavily on traditional internal combustion gasoline engines. It's an indication of where they see the market heading for the next few years. Although the automaker has been hesitant to move forward with hybrid and electric powertrains, Nikkei also reports that Mazda will begin mass production of EVs in 2019. Related Video:
2023 Japan Mobility Show Mega Photo Gallery: All the highlights and reveals from Tokyo
Fri, Oct 27 2023The 2023 Japan Mobility Show managed to serve up a surprise heap of exciting and futuristic designs and production reveals. Our staff was on the ground in Tokyo for this year's show, where we captured not just all of the latest automotive trends, but some genuinely weird and fascinating stuff. Browse: Some Delightful Oddities of the 2023 Japan Mobility Show But on to the cars. This year's show featured introductions from Daihatsu, Honda, Lexus, Mazda, Mitsubishi, Nissan, Subaru, Suzuki and Toyota. Some are weird; some are wild; most are probably destined to change significantly before production or merely fade into the void with the rest of the industry's vaporware, but if even a few of these make it to showrooms, we'll consider it a win. Scroll on down for our live galleries of each of the show's major debuts (and cars we're only now seeing in person for the first time). Enjoy!  BMW X2 and iX2 BMW X2 View 6 Photos  Daihatsu me:MO Concept Daihatsu me:MO concept View 14 Photos  Daihatsu Vision Copen Concept Daihatsu Vision Copen View 7 Photos  Daihatsu Osanpo Concept Daihatsu Osanpo View 6 Photos  Daihatsu Uniform Concept Daihatsu Uniform concept View 6 Photos  Honda Prelude Concept Honda Prelude concept View 5 Photos  Honda Sustania-C and Pocket Concepts Honda Sustania-C and Pocket Concept View 8 Photos  Honda CI-MEV Concept Honda CI-MEV View 3 Photos  Infiniti Vision Qe Concept Infiniti Qe concept View 14 Photos  Lexus LF-ZC Lexus LF-ZC View 8 Photos  Lexus LF-ZL Lexus LF-ZL View 10 Photos  Mazda Iconic SP Mazda Iconic SP concept View 8 Photos  Mitsubishi D:X Concept Mitsubishi D:X Concept View 8 Photos  Nissan Hyper Force Concept Nissan Hyper Force concept View 11 Photos  Nissan Hyper Tourer Concept Nissan Hyper Tourer concept View 6 Photos  Nissan Hyper Punk Concept IMG_6533 copy View 8 Photos  Subaru Sport Mobility Concept Subaru Sport Mobility Concept View 7 Photos  Suzuki Swift Suzuki Swift View 5 Photos  Suzuki eWX Suzuki eWX Concept View 3 Photos  Suzuki eVX Suzuki eVX concept View 4 Photos  Toyota Land Cruiser Se Concept Toyota Land Cruiser Se concept View 4 Photos  Toyota FT-3e Concept Toyota FT-3e View 6 Photos  Toyota FT-Se Concept Toyota FT-Se View 7 Photos   Tokyo Motor Show Honda Infiniti Lexus Mazda Mitsubishi Nissan Subaru Suzuki Toyota
Mazda's new turbo four fits in both the 6 and the 3
Fri, Jul 8 2016Despite the size differences, the Mazda CX-9 shares a lot with its smaller car-based siblings, the Mazda6 and Mazda3. That could allow Mazda to slot its full-sizer's new 2.5-liter, turbocharged four-cylinder engine under the hood of its smaller offerings. Pardon us while we do a happy dance. "[The 2.5-liter turbo] fits in a lot of our cars, and where we're actually going to put it is another question," Mazda North America vehicle development engineer Dave Coleman told Australia's Car Advice. Coleman specified that the turbocharged engine will fit in all the same applications that can accommodate the company's 2.5-liter gas and diesel engines. "Basically, that big space we used for the bundle of snakes exhaust manifold, the turbo is in that space too. They're all packaged to occupy the same space. It's exactly the same clearance as the exhaust manifold of the other engines." This kind of logic – if Engine A is the same size as Engine B, then both should fit in Car C – is what's lead us to imagine a turbocharged Mazda6 since the new engine was announced. In short, it's great news. Mazda's 2.5-liter turbo is a hell of an engine in the CX-9, and it's hard to imagine it'd be worse in a lighter vehicle. But just because it works from an engineering standpoint doesn't mean it's going to happen. At least, not soon. "It fits. I'm not a product planner so I don't get to make that call," Coleman told Car Advice. "It's up to the product planners to decide what they're going to put it in." The most obvious application for a turbocharged engine in the 3 or 6 is as a reborn Mazdaspeed model. But don't get too excited – Coleman said Mazda hasn't even gotten as far as building an engineering prototype with this engine. We're still firmly at the theoretical stage. And that's bad news, because it gels with what we've been reporting – that Mazda will wait a generation for future Mazdaspeed models. We just stopped doing our happy dance. Related Video: