Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Mazda MX-5 is a lightweight two-person sports car manufactured and marketed by Mazda with a front mid-engine, rear-wheel-drive layout.The convertible is marketed as the Mazda Roadster (マツダ・ロードスター, Matsuda Rōdosutā) or Eunos Roadster (ユーノス・ロードスター, Yūnosu Rōdosutā) in Japan, and as the Mazda Miata (/ m i ˈ ɑː t ə /) in the United States, and ...
See the exterior of the 2025 Mazda MX-5 Miata 35th Anniversary Edition from every angle.
Exterior Photos / Read the Full Story. Mazda has opened the order books on a 35th-anniversary special edition of the MX-5 Miata, which will come in only one color scheme: Artisan Red Metallic with ...
1991 Limited Edition (UK) 250 examples sold from March '91, produced in British Racing Green with tan interior, to celebrate the 1st anniversary of the MX-5 in the UK. These have a numbered brass plaque on the passenger-side padded dashboard and on the front of the Owners Book, and are fitted with colour-matched 15" OZ alloy wheels from MSW (Mazda Sports Workshop) which are often mistaken for ...
After leaving Mazda, Hall continued his career as an automotive journalist in Australia. [4]Hall lived in Malaysia from 2004 to 2011, [5] working for Proton as Head of product planning and programme engineering.
Top Gear magazine gave the 2017 model a score of nine out of 10, calling it "A complete sweetie of a roadster, this is the best the MX-5 has been perhaps ever."; [51] in April 2024, the magazine rated the car eight out of 10. [52] The car also received perfect five star review ratings from Car and Driver [53] and What Car? magazines. [54]
The MX-5 Miata Special Edition is a limited (450 units) version of the USA Market 2012 MX-5 Miata with black-only PRHT, two new body (non-roof) colors (Pearl White and Velocity Red), new 17-inch black gunmetal alloy wheels, black exterior accents, black heated leather seats and piano black interior finishes, 6-speed manual transmission with ...
In the 1990s, (after the move from Newport Beach to Northern California) Jay Lamm served as editor; [3] Lamm had worked at other publications, including Autoweek, and had written books on cars like the Mazda Miata. In 1994, SCI became the first magazine publication to go all-digital in its printing process. [4]