2019-04-01 CAR UK (1)

(Darren Dugan) #1

It’s a pity the diesel won’t sell, because it’s


better suited to the Mazda 3 than the petrol


46 CARMAGAZINE.CO.UK | APRIL 2019


P RICE
£24,595 (2.0-litre
Skyactiv-G GT
Sport)

PERFORMANCE
120bhp @ 6000rpm,
157lb ft @ 4000rpm,
10.4sec 0-62mph,
122mph

POWERTRAIN
1998cc 16v 4-cyl,
6-speed manual,
front-wheel drive

WEIGHT
1274kg

ON SALE
Now (first
deliveries
Data from May)

EFFICIENCY
44.8mpg,
142g/km CO2

gearlever. The infotainment is easy to use, if not
groundbreaking. Rear space isn’t great, while
the boot area is decently big and accessible but
unremarkable. That swooping C-pillar doesn’t
do your rear visibility any favours, and the thick
A-pillars won’t fill you with confidence either.
Hooray for the standard blindspot monitoring –
although, like many of the abundant electronic
safety aids, it’s annoyingly keen to flash and
bong to let you know it’s looking out on your
behalf; it’s intrusive and distracting.
Most of our driving was in the 2.0-litre
Skyactiv-G petrol. Its mild hybrid system in-
volves a belt-driven integrated starter-generator
that provides smooth start/stop activation, and
while the engine is fine for shopping and com-
muting it has little to offer the enthusiast. Peak
power is found at 6000rpm, but frantic pedal
mashing garners scant return. It feels gutless,
sounds strained and isn’t all that satisfying.
The Skyactiv-D diesel version is expected
to account for only five per cent of UK sales,
which is a pity given that it’s better suited to the
new Mazda than the petrol. It’s not noticeably
rougher or louder and has a useful bit of extra
torque in the low-to-mid rev range, egging you
on to use that satisfying stubby and snappy
manual shifter much more. There’s a 25kg
weight penalty over the petrol (1299kg kerb
weight instead of 1274kg) but the diesel does the
0-62mph sprint 0.1sec quicker than the petrol
when both are equipped with a manual ’ box.
Neither of the versions we’ve driven stretches
the new chassis. Precise and well-balanced
steering, suspension that (on 18-inch wheels)
communicates lumps but doesn’t jolt sharply,
good motorway refinement and excellent body
control when the going gets twisty are all great
traits to have. There are no drive modes, and you
don’t need them.
It may be a different story when the Skyactiv-X
compression ignition engine (with all-wheel
drive as an option) turns up. For now, this is a big
step forward. It has looks that date everything
else in one fell swoop, a lot of tech for your
money, impressive refinement and decent dy-
namics, adding up to a neat and modern package
that expands the already wide field of good
compact family hatchbacks.

keyless entry and heated front seats. Sport Lux
gets rear privacy glass. GT Sport adds powered
leather seats, a heated steering wheel and Bose
audio upgrade. GT Sport Tech (petrol only)
provides a 360º camera, among other safety aids.
Later in the year we’ll get the new engine
Mazda has been trumpeting for a while now,
the Skyactiv-X. That’s billed as an uber-efficient
petrol unit with the best qualities of a diesel.
Also later in 2019 we’ll get a saloon option.
The hatch body is clean and simple – the
direction Mazda has been going in under design
chief Ikuo Maeda, but done particularly well
here, with a low nose, slim lights, short over-
hangs and well-filled arches; wheels are 16in on
the two lowest trim levels, 18in on the fancier
versions. There are very few lines or creases in
the body – just a trust in the power of an elegant
curve and classic proportions; the opposite of
the Honda Civic.
Inside it’s similarly cleanly styled. It’s all about
horizontal lines, and not too many of them.
The physical dials now sandwich a seven-inch
colour display, and the centre screen measures
8.8 inches. It’s not a touchscreen – you explore
its menus using a rotary controller near the

Rear passenger
space is sacrificed
at the altar of style

Big mouth has
become a Mazda
design habit, never
used better

First drives


First verdict


Well-built, well-equipped and pretty, but the 3’s
crying out for more power – maybe the imminent
compression-ignition model will be the answer.

Free download pdf