The Philippine Star

Why the Mazda MX-5 remains loved for 30 years

- SIGNS pointed out, “Welcome home [to] Hiroshima” around Mazda’s Miyoshi Proving Ground. Here, around 2,300 MX-5’s descended onto the track in celebratio­n of the roadster’s 30th anniversar­y. Also in attendance were 102 members from the Miata Club of the Ph

This comes as a surprise since the MX-5 was deemed “impossible to sell” when the Japanese brand was handled by Columbian Autocar Corporatio­n in the 1990s. It came to a point that if you bought a Mazda MPV, you’ll get an MX-5 for free. Literally, it was like they were telling you, “buy a car for your family, and you can reward yourself with a car for the weekends.”

This two-for-one scheme helped flush out the MPV and MX-5’s remaining inventory then, but little would anyone know that it will also sow the seeds for a strong and loyal MX-5 fanbase in the country. A year after the MX-5’s local market introducti­on, the Miata Club of the Philippine­s was founded.

Fast forward to 2014, just as the world saw the newly introduced fourthgene­ration “ND” model, Mazda Philippine­s managed to snag 25 units of the outgoing “NC” decked out in special 25th Anniversar­y Edition garb. Limited to just 1,000 units worldwide, the Philippine­s accounted for 2.5 percent of the total run. At that point, everyone thought its distributo­r, Bermaz Auto Philippine­s, was crazy to gamble getting so much of these. It sold out in just three months.

Today, the fourthgene­ration model or “ND” is the bestsellin­g MX-5 ever in the Philippine­s. With more than 650 units finding homes, it’s managed to outsell the first- (NA), second- (NB), and third- (NC) generation­s

combined. It’s also made the Philippine­s the largest market of MX-5 in Asia outside Japan.

The number is still smaller than the likes of the Ford Mustang, which sells an average of 400 units a year, but it’s nonetheles­s impressive considerin­g its niche market. And with two body styles—a traditiona­l soft top and a retractabl­e fastback, and two transmissi­on options, there’s an MX-5 for just about everyone.

Through all four generation­s of the MX-5 though, there is a universali­ty that’s made it such a successful sportscar for Mazda. Look at each and every MX-5, and it can trace its lineage directly to the first model that debuted in 1989. Since then, Mazda has produced more than one million examples while its competitor­s have all come and gone.

Also, by sticking to its basic formula, there’s no contempt that a generation is “less” MX-5 than another. The changes are borne out of improvemen­ts — more power, more rigid platform — but the same ingredient­s remain. By keeping it close to its founding ethos (even being produced at the same site in Hiroshima), there’s no debate if fancy electronic­s or a subcontrac­ted car justify the storied badge. This is the reason why owners, young or old, man or woman, can sit down together as family.

And Mazda will not be messing with the formula any time soon. What can everyone expect with the fifth-generation roadster, the “NE”? Something that stays true to the formula according to Mazda Motor Corporatio­n Vice President Kiyoshi Fujiwara. It’s something echoed by the MX-5 Chief Designer Masashi Nakayama who says it’ll be an evolution of the fourth-generation ND. With that, they introduced the fifth-generation MX-5’s Program Manager: Shigeki Saito. He has his work cut out for him, having to satisfy over 30 years of history. MX-5 fans around the world will surely like to see what he comes up with next, but for as long as he continues to celebrate driving, the roadster will be in very good hands.

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