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In 1989, Mazda resuscitated the two-seater, convertible
sports car market with the Miata. From the first one out
the door, it delivered what the long-gone and only
lightly lamented English sports cars had never quite managed,
a delightful, fun, supremely capable, well-engineered car
that started every time and ran forever.
Over the intervening years, the Miata has worn well. It's
a daily commuter in environments as disparate as Southern
California and Detroit, Michigan. There are more Miatas
on racetracks every weekend around the country than any
other car. However, its carefully serviced freshness and
vaunted vitality has been fading lately. Direct competition
is looming in the form of the
Pontiac Solstice and
Saturn Sky, not to mention more expensive
entries from BMW, Audi, Porsche, and Mercedes.
Thus we have the all-new, 2006 Mazda MX5 Miata. It's
longer and wider, but taller. It's more powerful, but gets
better gas mileage and is cleaner. Its looks are sharper,
more assertive, but faithful to the heritage. It's also
more fun to drive, and not just because it's more responsive
to the driver's needs and wants, but also
because it's safer, with improved crash protection from
side impacts.
Price-wise, it's a compelling picture. Once you sift
through the shifting mix of standard and optional features,
that is. The entry-level 2006 MX5 Miata lists for $1,103
less than the base 2005. While the '05 came with air conditioning,
a spare tire, leather-wrapped steering wheel, boot cover,
and fog lights, it didn't have anti-lock brakes or side
airbags, both standard across the 2006 line. Given the choice,
we'll take the ABS and side airbags. When the top models,
the 2006 MX5 Grand Touring and the 2005 Miata LS, are tricked
out with all the available options, the '06 edges the '05
by about $1,500, but this also includes a few niceties like
the aforementioned side airbags, larger wheels with run-flat
tires, and dynamic stability control. So we're not exactly
complaining.
To us, this sounds like a good deal on a fun car.
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There's one basic configuration for the 2006 Mazda MX5
Miata, a two-door, two-passenger roadster. Three transmissions
are offered, a five-speed manual, a new-for-2006 six-speed
manual, and a six-speed automatic with Activematic, Mazda's
take on a shift-it-yourself slushbox. The automatic isn't
as robust as the two manuals, however, so the only engine
available, a 2.0-liter, inline four cylinder, comes in two
tuning levels, one rated at 170 horsepower, the other, for
the automatic, rated at 166 horsepower.
The least expensive Miata, the Club Spec ($20,435),
is what once might have been called a stripper model. It's
priced to get shoppers in the door or to form the basis
for a race car. It comes with a five-speed manual gearbox
instead of the six-speed manual; black fabric upholstery;
black vinyl top and door panels; urethane- wrapped steering
wheel and shift knob; manual door locks; a four-speaker,
AM/FM/CD stereo; a storage pocket on the back of the driver's
seat; a pair of open storage bins behind the seats; 16-inch
aluminum alloy wheels; carpeted floor mats; power outside
mirrors and windows. Air conditioning is not offered, nor
is cruise control. A tire puncture repair kit fills in for
a spare tire; and a four-year/50,000-mile 24-hour roadside
assistance program is standard.
Next up is the plain and simple MX5 ($21,435), which
is the Club Spec plus air conditioning and leather-wrapped
steering wheel. Mazda offers no factory options on this
model.
The list of standard features grows on the MX5 Touring
($22,435), with the inclusion of cruise control, power door
locks, steering wheel-mounted audio and cruise controls,
fog lights, a storage net on the passenger side of the center
floor tunnel, covers for the storage bins behind the seats
and silver trim on the seat back/roll bars. A six-speed
Activematic automatic transmission ($1,100) is optional.
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The MX5 Sport model ($22,935) is the first in the line
with the six-speed manual; the automatic is optional. Standard
features include 17-inch aluminum alloy wheels and a front
suspension tower bar. The shift knob is trimmed in leather
in place of the urethane used on the lower models. Run-flat
tires with performance- oriented,
asymmetrical tread and tire-pressure monitoring are optional
($515). And a sport-tuned suspension with Bilstein shocks
and limited slip differential ($500) is available for Sport
models with the manual transmission.
The top MX5 that'll be generally available is the
Grand Touring ($24,435). This is the classy Miata, with
all the standard equipment and options on the lesser models
plus a number of high-grade features. Among them: leather
seating surfaces in black or tan and leather-like interior
door panels; a cloth top in black or tan in place of the
the standard black vinyl top; silver-toned on various interior
grips and gauges; a seven-speaker Bose stereo.
The Grand Touring Premium Package ($1600) adds Xenon
HID headlights, dynamic stability control with traction
control, limited-slip rear differential, Smart Key keyless
ignition and anti-theft alarm.
Mazda will also sell a limited-edition MX5 for 2006;
hey, this is a Miata, remember? Called the 3rd Generation
Limited ($26,700), production will be capped at 3500 world
wide, of which 750 are destined for the U.S. market. They're
essentially Grand Touring models but painted Velocity Red
and with red or black leather interior; bright-finish, 17-inch
wheels; bright trim on various exterior and interior fixtures;
and a special, numbered badge on the dash.
Accessories include a detachable hardtop, a six-disc
CD-changer/MP3 player and Sirius Satellite Radio. Safety
equipment standard across the line comprises dual, two-stage
frontal airbags; new-for-2006, seat-mounted, side airbags
designed to protect the chest and head; and anti-lock brakes
with electronic brake-force distribution. The passenger-side
frontal airbag has an on/off switch, and that seat is fitted
with child safety seat anchors, or LATCH.
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