Posts Tagged ‘mazda’

Mazda RX-500

Tuesday, October 18th, 2011

The Mazda RX500 was originally displayed at the Tokyo show in 1970. Styling wise it had shades of the Mercedes C-​​111 (the Wankel-​​engined freak from the same period), but also featured that back end bulbousness similar to the styling of the Ferrari 250 GTO ‘Breadvan’.

It had scissor doors that swung upward and forward, and a 491cc rotary engine just behind the seats. Weighing in at a shade below 850KG and packing around 250 BHP the wheezy monster appar­ently reached 150 mph on Mazda’s test track.

The car was recently restored in partnership with the Hiroshima City Transportation Museum where it has appar­ently been on display. But as well as its muscular styling sticking out in the memory the car is inter­esting of course as much for its early shake-​​down of the rotary engine as a viable production option.

It’s a typically out-​​there ideas bed from the period that actually resulted in a sting of production Rotaries, albeit with slightly toned down styling. Makes you look at the brand slightly differ­ently, eh?

Mazda Familia Wagon

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010

In our ongoing search for the killer-​​est retro-​​cool runabout for a family of five with a bit of time on its hands, we recently stumbled upon this very lovely customised Mazda Familia 1200.

The pictures come via the very inter­esting Nostalgic Japanese Car Blog, and it seems that this is the outcome of a typically Australian fetish for super durable wagons that can survive the heat and the dust of the outback and the boondocks.

And if you’ve ever spent any time down under, you’ll, like us, be able to see how the sun visored, seventies-​​kitchen look (complete with Venetian blinds to the rear) that the wagon evokes is just meant to be piloted by a fair-​​dinkum, walnut brown Ocker Aussie in tailored shorts, long woolen socks and a light blue, short sleeve shirt.

We know this is shameless national stereo­typing, but hey, the World Cup is on and there’s never been a better time for it.

Perhaps, in the same way as the owners of pets begin over time to resemble the objects of their love, car lovers take on the charac­ter­istics of the objects of their automotive passions?

But that’s another story…

Mazda Cosmo Sport

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

We at influx are on a partic­u­larly strange roadtrip in Ireland as we write, with a 1973 Winnebago Brave.

More of that later this week.

But, one of the crew sharing the Winnebago’s Americana Kitsch sleeping compart­ments is an obsessive of Japanese and Chinese popular culture. Discussing the various attributes of godzilla films, girl super­heros and strange oriental fetishes whilst bowling stylishly along a County Clare byway, our conver­stion stumbled upon a series that featured the delectably pretty rotary engined Mazda Cosmo.

Of course, having never been intimate with ‘Return of the Ultraman’ we googled it as soon as we could find an internet connection. What arose was this deliciously retro, alarm­ingly progressive little coupé and a plethora of tribute videos that featured the pretty little thing, as well as countless screaming girl divas and huge plastic animals refer­enced throughout the ‘tube and on the Japanese telly. Apparently, hedeki-​​Go is a racing driver and human host for the Ultraman, who engages in a constant battle with the countless monsters, freaks and ghouls that populated the Japanese imagin­ation of the 1970s.

We thought you’d enjoy the cute lines of the Mazda, even if you might regard the Japanese series as bonkers. We certainly did.

Mazda RX-7 Group B

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010
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We stumbled across this rare and rather killer footage of the fleeting moments of Mazda’s RX7 Group B career on the highly enter­taining Japanese Nostalgic Car blog.

Listen to the sound of the RX7’s high-​​revving rotary engine, and enjoy the balletic beauty of the driver’s style.

I personally had no idea that Mazda ever entered Group B. But according to the experts, the rear wheel drive RX7 scored a rare distinction of a podium finish at the Acropolis Rally in 1985. When up against the hyper-​​powered AWD beasts like Walter Rohl’s Quattro etc.

Seeing these Group B monsters on tarmac is a rare treat.

Fuji Speedway Cine

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

This film, which we stumbled upon at oldschool.co.nz seems to be a bit of Mazda propa­ganda from the early seventies.

Dig the kodachrome-​​style colour satur­ation of the film itself. Dig the wickedly spooky loungecore soundtrack. Dig the style of the Japanese ladies and the beefy beauty of the boxy Sylines Mazdas and Nissans. And dig especially waved-​​out, silky-​​styled ‘dos of the drivers. But the highlight for us is the hi-​​revving buzz of the Mazdas’ rotary engines.

Unusually, the voiceover is in a quiant version of American English. Great piece of oriental nostalgia.

RX2 Image above from Shane Mcmanus

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Hail the Mazda RX-3

Monday, December 14th, 2009

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There’s a lot of people who can’t get enough of this boxy Japanese saloon from the 1970s. We think it has something to do with the simplicity of the three box form, which perhaps found its purest expression in these cars – and is almost wholly absent from the crurrent gener­ation of forum-​​designed, digitally rendered focus-​​group tested new machines.

If drag factor and flow conver­gence are the new design tyrannies — then the simple three box solution ruled in the analogue age.

Of all the sarariman staples of the era the Mazda RX 3 is perhaps the most inter­esting. Clashing head-​​to-​​head with the iconic Skyline throughout the seventies in Japanese motor­sport, they came with a high-​​revving, super reliable rotary engine that ensured that Nissan were given a run for their money on track.

And as far as marketing goes, we’re digging the way the RX 3 was sold. Unashamed racey DNA encoded in an everyman’s body: a sure fire hit for gener­a­tions of boy racers.

The RX3 is a less-​​obvious choice for a connoisseur collector of Japanese muscle.

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Japanissimo!

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

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Japan’s final victory in its long campaign to dominate the global car industry only came last year. General Motors had been the world’s biggest carmaker for 75 years, and last year celeb­rated its centenary. Toyota’s birthday gift to the General was to steal his long-​​held, long-​​cherished number-​​one slot. Japan overtook Germany as the world’s biggest car exporter back in ’74, and the US as the world’s biggest carmaker in 1980, but it took until 2008 for a Japanese carmaker to become the biggest in the world.

And when it finally came, it was a very Japanese victory. There was no corporate crowing. Toyota’s bosses wouldn’t discuss it; not even a press release was issued. Maybe they’d foreseen the cataclysmic sales slump that has since hit every major carmaker, Toyota included, and decided that making a big noise about numbers would be a bad idea.

But the slump won’t threaten Toyota’s number one position. And what do you notice about those two other red-​​letter dates in Japan’s automotive history? Each follows a major global economic crisis, namely the oil panics of ’73 and ’79. In each case Japan’s car industry was hit hard. But in each case, as the world’s economy rebounded, chastened car buyers wanted more of the small, reliable, economical and affordable cars the Japanese build so brilliantly. You can count on the same thing happening again.

Honda, First International Automaker To Build A Car In America

So where did it all go right for Japan? As a global car super­power, it was a very late starter. In the 1920s and ‘30s, as the US and European carmakers were bringing motoring to the masses and building fabulous Bugattis and Duesenbergs, the Japanese government classed anything with four wheels and an engine as a munition, and controlled what was built. So the first Japanese car firms – Mitsubishi, Isuzu, Mazda and Toyota – mostly built grim military trucks.

But the government also passed an act which made it almost impossible for foreign carmakers to continue to operate in Japan. Ford and GM estab­lished themselves in Europe before the war and still dominate. They also controlled virtually all of Japan’s car production until the mid-‘30s, and might still do if they hadn’t been booted out.

The Americans might have lost another oppor­tunity to stifle Japan’s nascent car industry during the war, when a massive bombing mission on Toyota’s main factory was called off after the A-​​bombs were dropped and Japan capit­u­lated. Not that Toyota and its rivals then had it easy; in the bleak post-​​war years they were reduced to making pots and pans to keep their factories open.

But the Americans helped out again, twice. First, while still controlling Japan they banned car production. So the Japanese concen­trated on building cheap, efficient motor­bikes, which found an instant, vast and desperate global market. By 1960, Japan was the biggest bike maker in the world, and firms like Honda and Suzuki got their start. Then the Korean War brought US money flowing into Japan, creating demand for military trucks, reopening the car factories and super­charging the Japanese economy.

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But the real inflection point came in 1955. The Japanese government again stepped in, but this time with a positive suggestion. It proposed a ‘people’s car’; something small, light and cheap that cash-​​strapped post-​​war car buyers could reasonably aspire to, with tax breaks to encourage firms to build them and buyers to buy them. It was the birth of the ‘kei-​​car’: the tiny, distinctive city transport still popular in Japan today. But more import­antly it brilliantly foresaw the kind of car the world would want in two decades’ time, and it wasn’t the gross-​​out, gas-​​guzzling, wings’n’fins monstros­ities that Detroit was producing.

Japan’s small-​​car expertise is the single most important reason for its success. But the Japanese also pushed hard to export them or – better – make them overseas, and built them with an efficiency and quality never seen before. Taiichi Ohno rose from the factory floor to create the fabled Toyota Production System; an obsessive-compulsive’s guide to carmaking now studied in business schools around the world, complete with its own language and the reason Toyotas have won die-​​hard loyalty for their utter depend­ab­ility. “If you want to go into the Outback, take a Land Rover,” runs an old Australian saying. “But if you want to come back, take a Land Cruiser.”

Japan’s reputation as a purveyor of passionless white-​​good-​​on-​​wheels is undeserved. True, their engineers’ passion is directed more towards faultless build quality than naked dynamism, but that’s hardly a bad thing. But this is also a car industry that got into Formula One and world rallying in the ‘60s, as soon as it could afford to. Honda’s first car was a sports car, and Nissan-Datsun’s 240Z one of the seminal sports cars of the ‘60s and ‘70s.

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But it wasn’t until 1989 that the Japanese really started to cut loose, launching the Mazda MX-​​5, which would become the world’s best-​​selling sports car, and the Lexus brand, which showed the Japanese could do luxury as well as – or better than – the Europeans. In 1990 came the incom­parable Honda NSX, which married Ferrari looks and responses to Corolla reliab­ility and running costs. And from ’92, Subaru and Mitsubishi put increas­ingly absurd amounts of power into the road-​​going saloon versions of their world rally cars.

All of these cars, and others, have fanatical followings at home and abroad, but it’s still hard to get excited about any aspect of a Toyota Avensis. Our feelings about Japanese cars run from utter indif­ference to total obsession. That won’t change. Right now, the Japanese car makers are hard at work on the plug-​​in hybrid, fuel-​​cell and battery-​​electric cars we’ll all be desperate for in a decade. Like those first kei-​​cars half a century ago, they won’t be exciting, but they’ll be ready when the world needs them.

And at the other end of the scale, there’s the new Nissan GT-​​R. It exceeds even icons like the NSX with its towering, staggering performance and intellect. But it differs from most of the stand-​​out Japanese cars of the past in being distinct­ively, self-​​confidently Japanese; its styling inspired by the giant Gundam robots of manga rather than the work of the famous European car design houses. Consider it a gift from the Japanese car industry to itself. And expect more of the same.

By Ben Oliver

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