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Mazda’s MX-5 Miata RF: A Peter-Pan Car Grows Up

Saturday, October 14, 2017

Our go-to Saturday breakfast used to be at Dunkin Donuts for a couple of reasons, the coffee and the Wall Street Journal. But two things happened that caused us to fall out of love with it. One was the purchase of of a Keurig coffee maker and the other was they stopped carrying the WSJ. The weekday Journal was chock full of news (limited appeal) and investment info (well above my comprehension), but the Saturday paper had all kinds of lifesytle articles which held interest with both of us. My favorite bit was Dan Neil’s car reviews. I’ve pretty much forgotten all about them until this week’s column popped up in my Google newsfeed under the Miata heading. I’ve reprinted it below.


Why the new grown-up Miata belongs in the car Hall of Fame – no if, ands, or buttresses

by Dan Neal
for the Wall Street Journal
October 12, 2017

About a decade ago I had hoped that auto makers would relent in their abuse of the word “icon.” Instead it got worse. Ladies and gentlemen, the iconic Lincoln Navigator, and so forth.

The word they grope for is canonical. The MX-5 Miata roadster, now nearly three decades in production, belongs to the canon of great cars-inimitable, essential and timeless, a Hall of Famer. And every time I take delivery of one I’m reminded what an outlier it is. There are no other cars quite like the MX-5 – a wee four-cylinder roadster with a six-speed manual and a rear axle that feels bolted to your sacroiliac – and there haven’t been since the days of MGBs, Triumph Spitfires and Lotus Elans. The elixir in this bottle is as British as mead.

There is one car that’s sort of like it: The 124 Spider, a brand-transsexual built by Mazda for Fiat Chrysler Automobiles. The Fiat shares many of the mechanicals of the fourth-generation MX-5 but not nearly enough. The Fiat supplants Mazda’s pitch-perfect powerplant-a naturally aspirated 2.0-liter twin cam-with the turbocharged 1.4-liter MultiAir four, which makes more power and torque (164 hp /184 lb-ft), eventually.

But the engine character is all wrong-the desert of torque at low revs, the peaky power band, the pernicious waste-gate flatulence-and the turbo lag is shattering. Tantric sex doesn’t have as much delay.

Also, in a case of what critic Harold Bloom would call anxiety of influence, the 124 Spider’s exterior design strains to depart from the donor Mazda, to the Fiat’s disadvantage. The visual quotes from the Tom Tjaarda-designed original of the 1960s – a two-plus-two convertible with a big boot – are too-heavy significations for a car on a 90.9-inch wheelbase.

Meanwhile, the Mazda’s good-luck happy-cat smile with electric whiskers is what Lionel Trilling would have called adorbs. Fiat’s sin was to monkey with a masterpiece. So what’s that make the 2017 MX-5 Miata RF (“retractable fastback”)? When in previous model years the retractable roof closely followed the contours of the cloth-top in order to minimize the visual difference, the RF maximalizes, with a pair of sweeping roof pillars integrated into the power-retractable deck lid. This flowing form, with fixed rear window, rises like a levitating Calatrava building while the roof panel tucks in, then snugs down again. They might have called it RT for “retractable targa” except for Porsche’s Wehrmacht of copyright litigators.

The Mazda’s power-roof cycle takes about 13 seconds but, because it’s such a small car, the speed at which the top can be lowered is limited to 6 mph, to avoid blowing hair being caught in the mechanism. This is the Isadora Duncan protocol.

Flying buttresses have a glorious history of obscuring drivers’ rear three-quarter view, to which the RF amply contributes. Its forebears include the Ferrari Dino GT, Chevrolet Corvette C3, Jaguar XJS, Toyota MR2 and Honda del Sol. I couldn’t see out of them either.

I would distinguish between these examples, for which the roof buttresses were primarily stylistic, and the latest generation of buttressed supercars like the Ford GT, McLaren 720S or Ferrari 812 Superfast, which use detached roof pillars scientifically, as aerodynamic elements. That is cool.

And despite the self-identifying, the RF isn’t a fastback. On a fastback, like a mid-1960s Dodge Charger or AMC Marlin or Jaguar E-Type or Lamborghini Espada, the backlight, or rear window, is steeply raked. The MX-5’s small rear window is vertical. This car only looks like a fastback from 270 degrees, thanks to the twin hypotenuse of roof pillars. This design conserves precious trunk space, which at 4.48 cubic feet is a bit smaller than the soft-top’s boot.

There is yet more hocus-pocus in the car’s faux rear-quarter lights, the apparently tinted-out windows behind the driver. Those are just black plastic panels, not windows at all. I suppose the designers were concerned the RF would look too awesome without them.

The retractable roof mechanism adds 113 pounds to the RF, for a total of 2,445 pounds with the six-speed manual. A six-speed automatic is optional, for burn-in-hell heretics. The RF’s life force derives from a blatty, chatty 2.0-liter twin cam (155hp/148 lb-ft), full of beans, torquey and flexible, with max torque and power at 4,600 and 6,000 rpm, respectively. At its 6,800-rpm redline, the Miata blares like a four-cylinder trombone.

The gun-oil slickness of the gear shifter, the heel-and-toe footies, all that jazz… As a British and Italian sports-car veteran, I feel confident saying nothing in the British Leyland or Fiat catalogue was ever this good, or even this dry. The RF feels to me like an idealized film biography of a great star who in real life was a bit of a shite.

  • 2017 Mazda MX-5 Miata Grand Touring RF

  • Price as tested $34,310
  • Powertrain Naturally aspirated direct-injection 2.0-liter DOHC twin-cam four cylinder with variable valve timing; six-speed manual transmission.
  • Power/weight 155 hp @6,000 rpm/2,445 lbs.
  • Weight-to-power 15.77 pounds/hp
  • Length/width/height/wheelbase 154.1/68.3/49.0/90.9
  • 0-60 mph 6.1 seconds
  • Top speed 130 mph (est.)
  • EPA fuel economy 29/26/33 mpg, combined/city/highway
  • Luggage capacity 4.48 cubic feet

 

Tagged: Miata, Miatatude

Who Likes Who Better

Friday, October 13, 2017

When I sat down at my desk at work this morning I looked down and noticed a bruise forming on the back of my hand at the knuckles of the middle and ring fingers. Took me a second, but then I remembered.

It is an immutable law of the universe that whenever there is a couple, each of the individual satellites surrounding them will seem to gravitate more to one than the other. Daddy’s little girl or the dog will come when called by one, but ignore the other. And it is not just people or pets.

Last night we went out for a drive in the Miata to grab a couple of Motoring Challenge points locally. The Miata was in the garage with the top up. I went to the driver’s side and Donna was on the passenger side and we both reached into disengage the top latches on our respective sides. Mine went easy, but Donna was having a hard time getting it to unlatch. She got it partially open and it snapped back closed, pinching outside of the hand between thumb and forefinger. Not hard enough to break the skin, but enough to turn the skin red and to hurt a bit.

Yesterday I drove the Mini to work to 1) show it off, 2) see how many people would think I’d bumped my head and got rid of the Miata and 3) see how many people don’t pay attention at all. The answers are: 1) a half dozen wanted to know about the car while one wanted to actually see it and sit in it, 2) two people, both today and 3) the other 250 or so.

My lunch box goes in the trunk of the Miata and went in the trunk of the Sonata too, but the Mini does not have an actual trunk per se, it has a hatchback with a spot behind the back seats and a little lid thing to keep stuff out of sight. When closing the Miata’s trunk lid I grasp the loop that goes into the latch mechanism and “throw” the lid down. The Sonata had a nice handle for this purpose molded into the underside of the lid. When I closed the Mini hatch before leaving home I just pressed down on the outside of the hatch and pushed. When I got to work, I noticed that the Mini, like the Sonata, had a handle for grabbing to close the hatch. When I tried it, it was sort of awkward to reach and when I “threw” it down I didn’t get enough force on it to totally overcome the upwards pressure from the 2 struts. The hatch went down 6 to 8 inches and bounced right back up and hit my hand. Hard.

This must be the cause of my bruised hand. And we now know for a fact that the Miata likes me better and the Mini likes Donna better.

The top photo of Fresh Pavement (1 point) was taken Wednesday on my way home, the other three we took last night. The BBQ Joint and Bed & Breakfast were worth 1 point each. The Solar Array is to replace our first attempt, so no points gained there.

BBQ Joint: This place is new in town and like every BBQ joint there is, some stuff is very good and others not so much. This one wins for use because we can, once the weather cools some, walk to it because it is less than a mile away from home. (10/12/17)
Bed and Breakfast: We’ve never stayed here as it is right in the next town over, the bustling metropolis of Montmorenci, SC. (10/13/17)
Solar Array: Found this much larger array than our original attempt and ironically, it was right across the street from that one. (10/13/17)

Tagged: Cars, Miatatude, Mini Life, Motoring Challenge

Coccinellidae

Wednesday, October 11, 2017

The Mini already has a name, Ladybug. First because of the coloring, but after the deal was done and we went to drive it off the lot there was a ladybug sitting on the driver’s outside rear view mirror. Tonight, as if to cement the name, when I went out to pull the Bob Richards sticker off the back and wash the windows better than Nissan of Augusta’s “detailer” did, there was another ladybug walking on the roof.

This car, for now, will be Donna’s daily driver as it replaces the departed Sonata. I am now slightly jealous about her getting the Mini, not because I like driving it better than the Miata, but because it has the lowest mileage of any vehicle in our fleet and I love a new car. But because I asked nice, she is going to let me take the mini to work tomorrow to show all my friends. I will have to back the Miata out of the garage for her to use tomorrow, she will risk driving it in, but just won’t back it out of the garage.

The post title, Coccinellidae, is the ladybug’s scientific family name and as it turns out it is not really even a true bug, it is a beetle, so Donna ended up getting a beetle anyway, just one from BMW not VW.

I spent lunch at work and another half hour at home creating the above avatar for the Mini like I’ve done for our past vehicles for use in online forums and as the avatar for Fuelly. To the right the Sonata is gone and the Mini has joined the Miata in the sidebar. Right now it shows zeroes for the Ladybug as we have yet to fill it up because they topped off the tank before giving us the keys. It will be the second fill up before data gets entered because I don’t know if the trip odo was reset when the dealer gassed it up.

Tagged: Cars, Mini

Purple Whale Harpooned

Sunday, October 8, 2017

by the Japanese whaling ship Nissan with a German spear made in in Great Britain…

Guess I won’t be submitting the What Car Should You Buy form after all.

We had our eyes on a Mini in Spartanburg and had planned on going up there on Saturday to test drive it. It is a 2012 Cooper Base in Spice Orange for eleven and a half thousand bucks. It has the dual panel sunroof, which really interested us, and had less than 40 thousand miles on it. The only thing that worried us was that it had been on their lot for over 2 years. Why hadn’t somebody bought it already? Then I searched for Minis for sale using different words, adding Augusta to the mix, and found one for sale at Nissan of Augusta (I’d link to the listing, but they already pulled it off the web), one-forth the distance away.

We were going right near there, to go to Cars & Coffee, so after looking around at the lines of Mustangs and stanced imports for a few minutes we drove 1/4 mile further down the road and test drove that Mini. It didn’t have the sun roof we liked and it was couple thousand more than the one in Spartanburg, but it was right there and it was basically brand new, as it only had 16 thousand miles on the odometer. We both liked it. It was smaller then the Sonata, a half a foot narrower and nearly 4 feet shorter, but it rode like the bigger car.

We left there and drove a couple more miles down the road to the VW dealer to test drive a new Beetle. Donna’s first car was a Beetle and we both sort of liked the looks of the new one, so we wanted to drive one of them to see if it could get on the short list of possible Sonata replacements. Short answer no. It was shorter than the Sonata, but almost as wide and Donna spent the whole short test drive scootched up in the seat trying to judge where the front of the car was.

After the Beetle disappointment, we came back to Aiken to go to the Chocolate Festival at St. Mary’s Church to eat lunch, shop for used books and eat several bucks worth of chocolate desserts. By that time we finished, it was too late to drive to Spartanburg to test drive that Mini before the dealer closed, so we went home.

At first we thought maybe we would wait until next Saturday to drive a hundred miles to see if we wanted the big sun roof and the orange color, but then thought, we’d wait, drive up there, not think the sunroof was worth it, hate the color, come back to Augusta and find that the Mini would have been sold on Friday. We stripped all our personal items from the Sonata, grabbed the title and went over to Augusta.

The Mini interior had changed slightly, here is a 2003 picture and here is a 2013 picture. Not really a radial change, so the big change must have been with us. We are still not sold on the big dinner plate sized speedometer in the center of the dash (there is a digital speedo in the bottom of the tach which is front and center), so maybe after a while it won’t bother us.

Tagged: Car Buying, Cars, Mini

Jalopnik “What Car Should You Buy” Submission Form

Friday, October 6, 2017

Donna and I are thinking of replacing the Sonata. It is a comfortable ride, but it is too darn big. You would think that after 6-1/2 years we would have gotten used to it, but no. I am still occasionally liable to cut a right turn short hitting the curb and getting it correctly length-wise into a regular parking spot is a hit or miss proposition. Visibility out the back is awkward and it is even worse for Donna because she is shorter than I am. We both agree that on paper the perfect car for us would be a Mini, but we were non-pulsed the first time we tried one back in 2003.The car has changed some, we’ve changed some, maybe we need to try one again. And probably will this weekend.

If the Mini fails to light our fire once more, I’m not sure what we should try next, so I’m looking for suggestions. One possibility for suggestions is on a car website I read daily, Jalopnik. They have a feature called What Car Should You Buy? where their crack staff make car buying suggestions based on how you fill out a submission form. I have reproduced it below with how I would fill it out. If we are underwhelmed by the Mini again, I might actually send it in, even though it seems as if their recommendations are there more for their entertainment value than anything else.

Name: Brian & Donna

Email: xxxxxxxxx@xxxxxxx.com

Would you be willing and able to provide a picture of yourself for the article? A picture of me, yes, but my wife feels that you are stealing a little bit of her soul anytime her picture is taken, so probably not her. Besides, someone has to press the shutter button.

Tell us about your situation We currently have a 2011 Hyundai Sonata that is just too darn big. The largest car we ever had before this was a 1983 Honda Prelude. We also own a 2002 Miata.

What are some attributes that you want from this car? It needs to be smaller than, but have the same ride comfort, as the Sonata.

Where do you live? Aiken, South Carolina

How old are you? Early 60s

What are your hobbies? Random road trips, bicycling, hiking & geocaching

How would you describe what you do? One retired and the second soon to follow

What are some cars that you like? Please explain why you like them. She likes beetles & he likes little 2 door coupes, probably left over warm fuzzy feelings for our first cars, a 71 beetle and a 73 Datsun B210.

Are there any deal-breakers? No Minis of any ilk, tried ’em, didn’t like ’em. Did I mention smaller than a Sonata?

Is there any other lifestyle information that would be helpful in determining the best vehicle for your needs? Although the weekly mileage will mostly be under a 100, we are prone to week long road trips of around 1500 miles. We checked “a little of both” in the type of driving category, but in reality it is more back roads driving. We live in a small town, nowhere near city sized and highways are for 18-wheelers.

What is your approximate price range?
Less than $5000
$5000 – $10,000
$10,000 – $15,000

$15,000 – $20,000
$20,000 – $25,000
$25,000 – $30,000
$30,000- $35,000
$35,000 – $40,000
$40,000- $50,000
$50,000- $60,000
$60,000- $70,000
$70,000- $80,000
Above $80,000

How long do you you plan on owning this vehicle?
1-3 years
3-5 years
5-7 years

7 years or more

Approximately how many miles a week do you drive?
Less than 100 miles
100-200 miles
200-300 miles
400- 500 miles
More than 500 miles

What type of driving do you do regularly?
Highway
City

A little bit of both

What body style? Check all that apply
Sedan
Coupe (2-door)
Convertible
Hatchback
Wagon
SUV
Crossover
Pick-up Truck
Minivan

On average how many passengers (including driver) will occupy this vehicle?
1-2
2-3
3-4
More than 5

Do have a preferred transmission type?
Automatic
Manual
Can’t drive a manual, but I’m willing to learn

No preference

Do you have a preferred drive type? Check all that apply
Front-wheel drive
Rear-wheel drive
All-wheel drive
4-wheel drive

No preference

Tagged: Car Buying, Cars

President Trump’s Aid to Puerto Rico

Thursday, October 5, 2017

Several month’s ago I gave up the dueling tweet thing with my Bernie and Trump figures. It got old because nothing ever changed, Senator Sanders kept tweeting things that made sense and BOTUS (Buffoon of the United States) kept tweeting nonsense. Both 6″ “action” figures went into a drawer under my desk. But after seeing the coverage of the president’s Monday visit to hurricane ravaged Puerto Rico, I just had to bring the doll out of exile.

Tagged: Action Figures, Politics, The Donald

Sneaky A** Atlantic Broadband

Wednesday, October 4, 2017

A little background first (in case you haven’t been following this site religiously), from our local cable company, Atlantic Broadband, we get the fastest internet they offer because that is what is really important. We also get what they call the Limited TV Service so we can get the local big 4 networks and the PBS stations. Because we get just the limited channels we don’t have the cable box that they usually rent you for a mere eight to ten dollars a month, the coaxial cable gets plugged right into the back of the Samsung.

In early September, we received a letter from Atlantic Broadband with the exciting news that starting October 10th all the Limited TV channels would be broadcast in digital format. To view these dramatically enhanced picture and sound quality channels you would need a digital adapter. The letter states that we were eligible to receive two digital adapters at no cost for use on TV sets that are connected directly to cable and if we needed more than 2, they would be $2.99 a month. One adapter would be mailed directly to our home.

Sure enough, two weeks ago, a box came in the mail and inside was an adapter and its associated remote. I placed it aside waiting for the 10th of October to see if I’m really going to need it or not. Right now, if I let the TV scan for available channels it finds over 40 stations which includes several standard definition versions of the local networks along with an HDTV version. So instead of watching the NBC affiliate in 4:3 low definition on channel 2, I watch the 16:9 high def one on channel 82-14, etc. I’m hoping that this will still be the case once they go digital. But not optimistic.

On Monday, we got an email that our cable bill for October was available for viewing and paying online. Hmmm, that total looks higher than it did last month., so I look at page 2 where the details are and looky here. Under Monthly Charges, along with the cost of our monthly cable service there is a line for a Limited Digital Adapter at a cost of $2.99 for the month. WTF? It is supposed to be free!

And it gets even better. Underneath the Monthly Charges section is one entitled Prorates where there is a line for Limited Digital Adapter at a cost of 89 cents. They started charging me for using the adapter (which wasn’t connected to the cable yet and supposed to not be needed until the 10th of October.) on the 22nd of September. Had they looked at the tracking number of the package and started charging on the day of delivery to my house?

Update: 55 minutes total on hold, 2 customer service representatives and the $4.49 “mistake” was removed from our bill.

Tagged: Cable, Rants
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