Not a bad innings for Mazda!
Submitted: Thursday, Feb 27, 2020 at 16:58
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axle
On January30, 2020, Mazda celebrated its100th anniversary of its founding
Mazda originated as a company producing cork ,and then took the path to manufacturing
automobiles
The first Mazda motor vehicle was produced in 1931, called the Go it was a three wheeled motor cycle type truck
By 2015 Mazda had produced 1.5 million vehicles. for global sales
Mazda vehicles have a very strong reputation world wide and continue to sell very
well.
Existing for 100 yrs is a pretty good testament
Funny enough..
Although I like the mazda sedans and we have had a few through out the family with very little trouble
the worst vehicle i've ever had myself was the E2200 easy load truck with that RB22 diesel engine what a shocker!...….LOL.
Cheers Axle.
Reply By: Ron N - Thursday, Feb 27, 2020 at 22:18
Thursday, Feb 27, 2020 at 22:18
Axle - I don't know what this RB22 engine is, that you talk of - but the 1980's E2200 Mazda vans and light trucks were powered by the 2.2L S2 Mazda diesel engine, which is a Perkins 4-135 engine built under licence by Mazda!
I have a Mazda E2200 van, and that little diesel is quite a good donk for the era.
Underpowered, at only 65HP, to be sure - but they are reliable enough.
I'd be interested to hear what kind of problems you encountered with your 2.2L Mazda diesel - apart from an inability to overtake anyone on the highway!
Cheers, Ron.
AnswerID:
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Follow Up By: Gbc.. - Friday, Feb 28, 2020 at 06:11
Friday, Feb 28, 2020 at 06:11
The first series of Kia Ceres was also based on the Ford/Mazda and the Perkins S2S2. I had one for a few years. Yes, slow, but it toiled away and always got it done.
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Follow Up By: axle - Friday, Feb 28, 2020 at 08:58
Friday, Feb 28, 2020 at 08:58
Ron
It was the alloy head ones that gave trouble ,Probably early ninetys, head gaskets were a big fault they just leaked no matter what you did. There was a company that introduced a cast head for them and that fixed the issue,if you wanted to pay the dollars.lol. if I remember the early ones did have a cast iron head ,just a change they made for the worst. Might of made a mistake with the Rb22, ….sure it was RB 2.2l ,It was along time ago, the memory does fade a bit these days lol.
Cheers Axle.
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Follow Up By: Ron N - Friday, Feb 28, 2020 at 12:18
Friday, Feb 28, 2020 at 12:18
Axle - O.K. You had the R2 diesel, the model after the S2.
The S2 was cast iron head and block with timing gears - then Mazda replaced the S2 with the R2 (1987) with a synthetic fibre timing belt, initially with cast iron head, then later (around 1990?) with an alloy head.
They all run 22 to 1 compression ratio, the reason why the head gasket became a problem.
Cheers, Ron.
FollowupID:
905531
Reply By: Ron N - Friday, Feb 28, 2020 at 23:43
Friday, Feb 28, 2020 at 23:43
I've got a Mazda forklift and it's powered by a 2 litre Mazda VA engine. The motor was worn out and in pieces when I picked up the forklift for $300 - and I set to and rebuilt the VA engine.
This little engine is built like a tank with replaceable wet cylinder liners - and despite having done probably 10,000 to 12,000 hrs of hard, stop start work, I couldn't find any wear on the crankshaft journals.
I also dug about 2-1/2 cupfuls of muddy dirt out of
the block, from the bottom of the liner area, testimony to the cooling system abuse it had received.
It had a fibre timing gear, which I don't like, so I found a Nissan H20 timing chain and sprockets fitted in place of the timing gears, with very little modification.
This little donk runs like a top, and in the era when these were built (late 1970's/early 80's), Japanese engineering was really hitting its stride.
I also have an '81 Ford Laser Ghia hatchback - a Mazda with Ford badges - another great little chariot, sips fuel like a Mini, goes like a train, and I can fit a mind-boggling amount of stuff inside it when I fold the seats down!
I'm not sure how the latest Mazdas are for build quality and reliability, but the older ones were certainly pretty good.
A fascinating little snippet of historical news below, about how Mazdas founder, Jujiro Matsuda, survived the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.
How Mazda survived the bombing of Hiroshima.
Cheers, Ron.
AnswerID:
630260
Follow Up By: axle - Saturday, Feb 29, 2020 at 10:16
Saturday, Feb 29, 2020 at 10:16
Ron, my daughters have both had the later mazda 3, and not one problem with either in excess of a 100,000ks . At the time, the sales figues for private sales was
well above Toyota corolla
.
which for a while there was building some pretty ordinary vehicles.
Cheers Axle.
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Reply By: Bob Y. - Qld - Saturday, Feb 29, 2020 at 13:00
Saturday, Feb 29, 2020 at 13:00
Was that truck the one with 4 speed box and a splitter, Axle?
Had never had anything to do with Mazda, until a daughter bought a 2nd hand 323 in 2004, and she still has it, with only a couple of hiccups over the past 16 years. Then another daughter bought a CX-3 turbo diesel, which suits her style of driving, and it’s been trouble free. In 2016, we bought a CX-5 twin turbo diesel, after 40 years of Holden utes, a Datsun Skyline, a Hilux dual cab & the remainder, Landcruisers.
The CX-5 is a great touring vehicle. Roomy, quiet & comfortable enough to knock over a 1K km day in 12 hrs, and not needing surgical removal from the cab, at end of the day. Economy is around 6.5-7L/100 at 100-110, giving fuel range close to 800kms. Torque produced is only 30nm less than a stock V8 Landcruiser ute, from a 2.2L 4cyl engine. Pulls like a train!
Bob
AnswerID:
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Follow Up By: axle - Saturday, Feb 29, 2020 at 15:00
Saturday, Feb 29, 2020 at 15:00
G/Day Bob,
Just a light little truck small duals on the rear, actually could carry a load very
well , better than any car type ute, just a bit under powered,
No splitter box, although I thought I had a split box! one day when a horrible noise erupted from underneath, it was a gearbox bearing saying" ive had enough "...lol.
The CX5 sounds like a great unit.
Cheers Axle'
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Follow Up By: Ron N - Saturday, Feb 29, 2020 at 16:50
Saturday, Feb 29, 2020 at 16:50
Bob, the Mazda trucks with the splitter were the T-series - the 6 cyl T4100, and the 4 cyl T3500.
They all had 5 speed gearboxes, the splitter made them 10 speeds. Nearly as good as a Kenworth! LOL
The E2200 Mazda truck was the "flat low" variety with small duals on the rear and bigger front wheels, meaning you had to carry two spares.
Flickr - E2200 Mazda truck
Cheers, Ron.
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