Very Rare Mazda : Mx-5 Miata - Color Splash Green Mica (turquoise) on 2040-cars
Bridgeville, Pennsylvania, United States
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This is an absolutely beautiful 2003 Mazda Miata MX-5 with an Automatic transmission. The exterior color is Splash Green Mica with a Black soft top and Black Leather interior. This is an extremely clean vehicle in beautiful condition with 31,364 miles. The original window sticker is in with the Owner's Manual . This Miata is equipped with the Leather package, which also includes the Bose CD stereo and radio, power windows/door-locks/mirrors/antenna, cruise control, rear defroster and chrome gas cap cover. All of the equipment in this car has been checked and is working. The air conditioning works great, as does the heater. All of the gauges and instrumentation are working and reading correctly. This car is very well taken care of for the past 11 years.
This Miata
runs and drives beautifully, and there aren’t any warning lights on. The engine
runs strong and smoothly, and the transmission shifts very nicely. The exterior of this Miata is in beautiful condition. This Miata was just recently detailed and it looks fabulous. The paint is super glossy and lustrous. The top is original and still looks great. There isn’t any body rust at all, and the undercarriage is very clean.
The interior of this Miata is in terrific condition except for the mentioned glue smear. All of the interior trim pieces, door panels, buttons, switches and the console are in excellent condition. The leather seats are soft, supple and in excellent condition. There aren’t any rips or holes on the seats. The carpeting is clean and fluffy without any stains, holes or damage. This is a non-smoker owned vehicle. There aren’t any smoke odors or burn marks inside this car.
The vehicle has a clear title. This is a beautiful looking and excellent running vehicle. As mentioned above there is a glue smear on the passenger side console where I tried to glue a cell phone magnet. It slid. There is also cracked paint under the trunk on the bumper. I have included pictures of both of these. Car is beautiful and extremely rare color. I have only seen the same color 3 times in past 11 years. It has been garaged kept and winter stored here in Pa. I am the original owner and purchased the vehicle at Tomsic Car Dealership in McMurray, Pa. The car was brought here from Wooster, Ohio for me to purchase. Sale will go to highest bidder after reserve has been met. Payment is to be made through PayPal. Local delivery only and car will be signed over when cash is deposited with Paypal or may make cash payment or Cashier's check(once it has cleared). |
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Auto Services in Pennsylvania
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Junkyard Gem: 1982 Mazda RX-7 GSL
Sun, Jul 26 2020The early Mazda RX-7 was one of the few bright spots for sports-car shoppers during the Malaise Era, a lightweight and simple rear-wheel-drive machine with a screaming Wankel engine under the hood. Even though it was designed mostly as a means of getting Japanese car buyers a loophole to keep their engine-displacement-based road taxes low, the early RX-7 sold well in North America. I still find these cars during my junkyard travels, but the 1981-1983 FB-series RX-7s have been getting scarce in recent years. Here's a very solid '82 that showed up in Denver during the winter. Japanese cars of this era tended to rust early and often, but this one appears to be absolutely corrosion-free. The odometer shows just a hair over 100,000 miles, so I'm guessing this car spent decades in covered storage. The seat leather shows a few rips, but the interior looks pretty good overall. The body has some dents and dings, nothing serious. It wouldn't have taken much to get this car back on the road and looking good. The GSL package got you four-wheel disc brakes, a limited-slip differential, and these cool-looking pillar badges. The list price on a new 1982 Mazda RX-7 GSL came to $11,895, or about $32,350 in 2020 bucks. A new Datsun 280ZX coupe went for $14,499 that year, but was a much more powerful and prestigious car; the less opulent 200SX was just $7,739. If you wanted a new Celica Supra, the price tag was $14,598. The final year for the Fiat-badged 124 Spider (they were sold with Pininfarina badging for a few additional years) was 1982, and that car cost $12,290. Meanwhile, your Chevrolet dealer had new Z28 Camaros starting at $9,700 that year; the RX-7 would eat up the Camaro on a tight road course but would be blown away on the straights. The 12A rotary engine in this car made 100 horsepower from just 1.1 liters of displacement, putting smiles on the faces of those Japanese road-tax payers. Unfortunately, fuel consumption was scary, particularly in the immediate aftermath of the 1979 Oil Crisis. Why did this car end up in a place like this? It was found in an office parking lot with a flat tire and expired registration tags and towed away. Then it failed to attract any bidder interest at the subsequent auction and U-Pull-&-Pay picked it up for next to nothing. So, if you ever wanted an early RX-7, buy the next cheap one you find before it meets a fate similar to that of today's Junkyard Gem. This content is hosted by a third party.
Mazda Skyactiv-X Review | The revolution begins with a squeeze-bang
Fri, Jan 26 2018The matte black Skyactiv-X prototype looks like a rough Mazda3, perhaps reconstructed after a bad wreck by an over-enthusiastic owner of a spot welder and lots of gaffers' tape. Ribbed ducts poke out of the dash sending two breaths of conditioned air to no one in particular. Even its revolutionary engine, the thing we're here to experience, is entombed in a massive, nondescript cover to mask its unseemly noises. It's a wild, strange way to meet a very unconventional vehicle that promises diesel-like fuel economy, a wide torque band, and an exotic method for burning less gas than ever before. It takes a few hours for Mazda's engineers to explain the fundamental principles of operation. For more detail, read our Skyactiv-X Spark Controlled Compression Ignition explainer, but here's a very brief overview. Skyactiv-X marries some traditional gasoline engine characteristics with a novel form of compression ignition called SPCCI. The key for Skyactiv-X is to use very high compression in the cylinder and an extremely lean fuel-air mixture. Squeezed right to the cusp of getting hot enough to blow up all on its own (which is very hard to predict), a squirt of extra gas and a spark interject to cross that compression-ignition threshold in a controlled and predictable manner. See the animation below: That takes a few essential components to get just right. One is a massive amount of computer processing power and some pressure sensors in the individual cylinders, because the ambient conditions change how and when these things happen. Skyactiv-X uses a clutched supercharger to pump in additional air when needed to nail the mixture precisely, and high-pressure injectors to get the low ratios of fuel to disperse properly in the chamber. And since it operates like a conventional gasoline engine sometimes, it uses valve timing to lower the very high compression ratio so it doesn't reach combustion ignition in that mode. In practice, the Skyactiv-X runs in compression ignition mode most of the time. In practical terms, that means it drives like a torquey gasoline Skyactiv engine. The torque curve is broad and flat — diesel-like in that respect. That also means it can get away with using a six-speed transmission and a lower final drive for better response. There's enough grunt and economy together that Mazda can let the engine spin faster — at 60 mph, it's running at roughly 1,000 more RPM than a similar gas engine, with greater efficiency.
Turbo Mazda6 starts at $30,090, only base trim gets manual
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