Friday, 28 October 2016

Ask the Man Who Owns One: Mazda CX-5

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October 28, 2016 at 12:33 pm by | Photography by Josh Jacquot, Illustration by Andy Potts

Ask the Man Who Owns One: Mazda CX-5

From the November 2016 issue

Crossover SUVs are appliances, the toasters of autodom, purchased and driven by pragmatic people making pragmatic choices. They’re as ubiquitous as they are routine, crawling through Piggly Wiggly parking lots and plugging along in middle-school pickup lines. Like refugees of a child-free lifestyle, most have fully surrendered themselves to domestic duty. Crossovers meet the need. They check the box. But they don’t light any fires. Loving one doesn’t come naturally to me.

Yet, I do. I own a 2016 Mazda CX-5, and I love it.

I love it because I don’t feel the weight of domestic burden every time I turn the steering wheel. I don’t have to. Because it turns like a car. Better than many cars, in fact. When the CX-5 was introduced, Mazda engineers wheeled the crossover around Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca faster than the smaller, lighter Mazda 3 with the same powertrain. Unlike many of its counterparts, it’s not just an A-to-B appliance with good visibility and cargo space. Rather, it’s a carefully crafted driving machine that happens to offer those virtues. Even the details are right.

2016 Mazda CX-5

Like all Mazda SUVs, its stability control can’t be disabled. An attempt to thwart mid-winter parking-lot donuts, perhaps? To diminish fun on gravel roads? To keep a relatively tall vehicle safe from the haunting left hook of physics? Actually, it’s only that last one, because Mazda nailed the stability-control calibration on the CX-5 so perfectly that it will allow modest, controlled four-wheel slides. The mundane trivialities of make-it-safe-and-forget-it stability-control tuning weren’t lost on the minds at Mazda. In fact, they weren’t trivialities. Because to Mazda, as to us, what happens when you turn the wheel and push the pedals actually matters.

Mazda is a small company with a big sense of identity. It knows what it is and what it makes. It knows that people buy Mazdas for a reason. It won’t sacrifice that identity on the altar of market share. It’s happy to stay small by making driving machines that also function pragmatically. And that, at this stage of my life, is exactly what I need.


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