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Inspired by…Gene
Roddenberry? By: Jason Muxlow
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The CX-7 is Mazda’s first real foray into the
ever-expanding crossover SUV market. Yes, they had
made a go with the Tribute, but under the direction
of the Ford design studio, let’s just say, they
weren’t all speaking the same language. But now
Mazda is serious with an entry that ties its roots
back to the family. Chief among these are the RX-8
and the MX-5, favorites among the AT staff.
Editor Dye has sworn that an RX-8 will find a home
in his garage someday. We’ve never yet turned an
MX-5 down and on more than one occasion found a way
to tease out every ounce of handling prowess it
could muster.
So how does a heavy 4000-ish pound SUV find a way to
tickle our fancy? It’s unique. There literally is
nothing else out there like it. Sure it is built
upon the same basic platform as the Ford Edge and
Lincoln MK-what-ya-ma-call-it, but that is about all
it shares. The look is different, the ride is
different, the engine is different, the way you
order coffee from the drive up window at Starbucks
is different. It is different!
The styling has more in common with a science fiction
novel than a car. The fenders are flared
aggressively wrapping huge 18-inch alloy wheels and
Goodyear Eagle RS-A tires. The hood line is chiseled
and raised to give clearance to the top mounted
intercooler. The cockpit has a space pod look to it,
and the front windshield looks as though Mazda went
out and found the absolute largest piece of glass
they could find. The whole thing just has a kind of
“Beam me up, Scotty” look to it. I mean, the first
time I grabbed the door handle I expected to hear
the airlock release. Exhaust pipes? Warp Nacelles!
Best of all, it has warp drive! Under the hood is
Mazda’s 2.3-liter turbocharged direct-injected
four-cylinder, the same warp core, albeit detuned,
they put into the MazdaSpeed6. While it may only
have 244 hp and 258 lb-ft of torque, down from the
Speed6’s 274 hp and 280 lb-ft torque, it doesn’t
take a math major to realize that it is still
producing more than the benchmark 100-hp per liter
of displacement. And while takeoff from a standstill
is not an explosive event, it will impress upon the
back of your seat the size of your waistline. The
run to 60 mph took 8.4 seconds, and a complete stop
came 124 feet later. Not bad, for a space pod.
The handling is controlled and confident. The CX-7 will
track where you want it to go. Underneath all that
aggressive bodywork is the suspension of a sports
car. A Speed6 was sacrificed for the purpose of
keeping this rig to the road. The CX-7 will never
carve a corner like an MX-5, but the travel will be
brisk.
The drive is not all peaches, however. The engine loves
to rev (at least to 6,000 rpm), a wonderful thing
for that darty back road affair on your commute
home. But the Mrs. Middle Class Responsible Citizen
just wants to deliver the kids to soccer practice
without a hullabaloo, and the CX-7 doesn’t like
that. The engine doesn’t like practical. There is a
personality switch at 2,500 rpm that says OK, lets
Tango! Oh, and the same suspension that keeps the
shiny side up during your little bout with midlife
crisis, makes for a stiff-legged ride to Grandma’s
house on anything but perfect pavement.
The driver’s seat is now the Captain’s chair. The
cockpit has an airy feel to it, due largely to the
tall greenhouse, sunroof, and ridiculously large
windshield that is raked to 66 degrees. Entry and
ignition is entirely keyless, it is like the car
recognizes who you are. Now all it needs is a
middle-aged female voice to say: “Good Morning, Mr.
Muxlow” as I head out to work. The steering wheel is
the same as that in the MX-5, further inspiration
for a “spirited” drive. The shifter to the 6-speed
automatic is well, an automatic. Yes, there is a
manual selection mode, which does obey your
commands, but—there is always a “but” with these
things—it's slow. Why didn’t Mazda include the
paddle shifters we still wonder? Again, Mazda makes
good use of soft touch plastics where it counts and
frames the controls pod in shiny metallic look trim.
The charcoal-over-tan look is warm and inviting,
however, the scaly suede stripe down the centerline
of the seat is a bit odd. My brow might have
wrinkled.
In a nutshell, the CX-7 is a futuristic thing of
wonder. No really, if you must drive an SUV but want
to retain a hint of real sportiness on a budget, at
the $32,005 as-tested price the CX-7 is worth a
look. Best of all, it is fresh, maybe a bit over the
top, but fresh. It is invigorating to see a Ford
subsidiary willing to put itself on the line with
styling. |
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| The
Good: |
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Fresh styling, whiz-bang motor, confident handling.
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| The
Bad: |
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No paddle shifters, rides too stiff for some,
requires premium fuel.
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| The
Verdict: |
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Could someone please show the Ford design team one of
these?
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