Handling comparisons to other cars in its class put
the Mazda 6 near the top of the heap. The Mazda 6 holds
the road better when cornering than the
Honda Accord,
Toyota Camry, and
Nissan Altima, and it offers better transient response than other mid-size
sedans in quick lane-change maneuvers. The Camry feels genuinely
lethargic by comparison and the Altima feels like a bigger
car. The Mazda's handling is sharper than the Honda's.
The Mazda 6 uses a new double wishbone front and lateral
link rear suspension design, with revised rack-and-pinion
steering. The Sport version uses relatively skinny 215/50VR17
Michelin tires; standard tires are 205/60R16s. Grip is very,
very good right up to the point where the front end pushes,
telling you to lighten up.
Other mid-size sedans lose grip far sooner than the Mazda
6. The amount of power-steering assist backs off the faster
you go, to give a really nice feel, though still on the
light side, at high speeds.
Ride quality is plusher than we were expecting, but
body roll is nicely controlled by the lateral link rear
suspension and the standard front and rear stabilizer bars.
Road and wind noise do come through, however. This car is
not as quiet as the new Accord and the road noise is relatively
pronounced on broken pavement. We felt that the extra bodywork
on the Sport version we drove may have been the generator
of a bit more road and wind noise than we would have liked,
because other models that we drove didn't carry as much
total noise as the Sport version.
The Mazda 6 offers better braking than the other cars
in this class, stopping in shorter distances. The anti-lock
brakes demonstrated a marked propensity to arrest forward
motion, with solid, progressive pedal feel, and good resistance
to fading from prolonged heat buildup.
The Mazda 6i is a hoot to drive. Order it with the five-speed
manual and you'll find the fun zone starts at about 4000
rpm where it's very responsive. This engine loves to rev
and the manual gearbox is fun to row. Below 3000 rpm, however,
the double overhead-cam four-cylinder engine lacks strong
throttle response. Mazda's 2.3-liter four-cylinder provides
the 6i with acceleration performance that's on par
with other four-cylinder mid-size sedans. The new
Accord may be slightly quicker, but the Mazda feels sportier. Overall,
the Mazda 6i feels younger and far sportier than the other
mid-size sedans, especially when equipped with the Sport
Package. Fuel economy from a Mazda 6i with manual gearbox
is below the class average, however, EPA-rated at 20/27
mpg.
The 3.0-liter V6 engine found in the Mazda 6s greatly
increases the fun. Mazda's V6 uses variable valve timing,
providing plenty of low-down torque, a willingness to rev,
good gas mileage, and a nice set of sounds from the air
intake system and the dual exhaust system.
The automatic transmission with the optional manual
shifting strategy was a very good companion for the flexible
engine, interrupting torque on both upshifts and downshifts
for smooth, positive shifting without that secondary, rubbery
bump that some front-drive transaxles generate. The Sport
AT automatic transmission offers a manual mode. Pull back
on the stick to upshift, push forward to downshift.