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The 2024 Mazda 2 range of configurations is currently priced from $19,999.
Our most recent review of the 2024 Mazda 2 resulted in a score of 7.8 out of 10 for that particular example.
You can read the full review here.
This is what Chris Thompson liked most about this particular version of the Mazda 2: Fully kitted small hatch, Extra safety features, Sedan option
The 2024 Mazda 2 carries a braked towing capacity of up to 900 Kg, but check to ensure this applies to the configuration you're considering.
The Mazda 2 is also known as Mazda Demio in markets outside Australia.
The Mazda 2 2024 prices range from $19,360 for the basic trim level Hatchback G15 Pure to $30,140 for the top of the range Sedan G15 GT.
All Mazda2s feature alloy wheels, Apple CarPlay and Android Auto connectivity, six-speaker audio (with digital radio), leather-trimmed steering wheel, gearshift and handbrake lever, plus keyless entry and start.
It’s important to understand, but is the engine in your Mazda 2 timing belt or chain driven? That’s because a timing chain should last the life of the car with no extra maintenance, while a timing belt will need to be replaced at regular intervals. If you ignore timing belt changes, the belt can snap in service and destroy the whole engine.
Fortunately, the engine in the Mazda 2 uses a timing chain, so should require no special maintenance for as long as the rest of the car is running properly. That gets around the problems of the cam drive belt replacement as well as the associated cost.
This advice applies to both engines used in the Mazda 2 since 2002 and covers the ZY-VE engine (2002 to 2014) and the later V-P5 and F-P5 engines. It’s also dependent on regular oil changes and other maintenance having been carried out.
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The popular MG3 is the model you’re referring to and you’re right; it hasn’t been locally crash-tested. But it does lack some important safety gear. Enough, we reckon, to knock it off your short-list. The MG lacks, for instance, important driver aids such as autonomous emergency braking, blind-spot monitoring and lane-keeping assistance, nor can these features be had by spending more on a fancier version.
Which leaves us with your other two choices, the Hyundai i30 and Kia Rio. Even then, you’ll need to option up beyond the base-model to get (some of) those safety features, but these are not expensive cars to begin with, so the jump might not be as bad as you think.
The other car to consider would be the SP Pure version of the Mazda 2. At $23,690, it’s not over-priced but it does have low-speed (up to 30km/h) autonomous emergency braking, blind-spot monitoring and lane-departure warning as well as rear cross-traffic alert.
And a manual transmission? The MG 3 no longer offers one, both the Hyundai i30 and the Kia Rio are available with a six-speed manual option. The Mazda 2 Pure SP is automatic only, but you can get a six-speed manual on the base-model Mazda 2.
I agree that youngsters taught to drive a manual car tend to be better drivers, but that’s not a universally held view these days. And the fact is that most young drivers will never be presented with a clutch pedal in the future, raising the question of why learn in the first place? The reality is that learning to drive a manual car gives you extra mechanical awareness and extra ability to multi-task behind the wheel.
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Mazda is unlikely to introduce a sedan larger than the Mazda6, due to the declining sales of larger sedans globally in favour of SUVs.
However, with Mazda marching upmarket and its ties with Toyota strengthening, a joint-venture project with Toyota or even Lexus, using Mazda's new rear-drive platform and inline six-cylinder engine range, may make a model-sharing luxury flagship – a modern-day 929 in other words – a possibility.
But there are currently no plans that we know of pertaining to such a model, sadly.
We hope this helps.
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Mazda’s ‘Skyactiv-G’ 1.5 litre four-cylinder petrol engine is the unit used for both six-speed manual and automatic models, but outputs vary slightly.
Manual cars have 82kW and 144Nm, while autos have a slightly lower 81kW and 142Nm, both driving the front wheels only.
At just over four metres long, a fraction under 1.7m wide, and close to 1.5m tall, the Mazda2 is small but not tiny. Space up front is fine for two full-size adults, and rear room is surprisingly generous.
Boot capacity is 250 litres (VDA) with the 60/40 split-fold rear seats up, expanding to 852 litres with them folded down.
The Mazda2 (sedan and hatch) seats five, the seats trimmed in cloth on lower grades and partial-leather on the top-spec GT.
Mazda claims a 5.0L/100 km rating for the automatic Mazda2, which is down by 0.3L/100km over the previous version, but the manual’s unchanged engine tune burns through the petrol at 5.4L/100km.
Tha Mazda2 has a 44-litre fuel tank, so could theoretically travel 880km under perfect fuel consumption and a full tank in automatic guise, or 815km in manual.