SkyActiv-X VS THE REAL WORLD
Mazda’s world-first X-engine is impressive on paper. But what does it offer on the road?
Mazda’s SkyActiv-X engine is an astonishingly complex engineering achievement that yields incremental real-world benefits. So it’s easy to be cynical.
Basically, it’s a world-first engine fuelled by petrol that works like a diesel most of the time, meaning you theoretically get the best of both worlds. Hence the ‘X’: it’s a crossover of the two technologies.
It’s tangible evidence of Mazda’s confident assertion that the internal combustion engine still has more to give in the face of the car-industry obsession with electric vehicles.
The real-world face of X is the Mazda3 hatchback you see here, which is one of the first production models to feature the new 2.0l engine.
So . . . is the Mazda3 X a more grunty alternative to the 2.0l G that maintains fuel efficiency, or is it a more thrifty alternative to the top 2.5l G that keeps most of the power? It’s neither of those strictly, yet a bit of both.
The potentially negative spin is that there’s not a massive difference in the power and especially fuel economy figures between the new Mazda3 X and either of the G models. So what’s the point of the extra $3200 you have to fork out for the new engine?
Well, it stands to reason that new technology costs. But Mazda partly gets around the issue by offering the X-engine only in the top Mazda3 Takami model, which also adds higher-quality leather upholstery, gloss-black alloys, a swish frameless rearvision mirror, heated steering wheel and 360-degree parking cameras.
After driving Mazda3/CX-30 X and G back-to-back and then a longer test-period with the Mazda3 Takami, I’m convinced this technology makes for a more satisfying and efficient mainstream Mazda.
The X-engine can operate either in Spark Controlled Compression
Ignition (SCCI) mode, or standard spark ignition when required. Which is not that often.
The theory of X is that you get the low-down torque and efficiency of a diesel with the same high-rev performance as a petrol. And so it proves in practice, although it still can’t match the ultimate power, torque and perkiness of the G 2.5l.
The low-speed performance is helped by the fact that the X is a mild hybrid, the battery system doing its best to reduce load on the engine. There’s also a part-time supercharger on call to force-feed
air when required.
The calibration of the 6-speed gearbox, which I’ve sometimes found wanting in the G-engined Mazdas, also seems much better resolved in the X.
If there’s opportunity cost it might be in the mid-range, where the X-engine can sometimes seem to go off the boil a little. Whether that’s endemic to the X technology or just the hybrid system stepping back is hard to say.
The SkyActiv-X option will no doubt appeal to tech-heads who appreciate what an incredible engineering achievement it is — and how significant it might become in future models. But there’s plenty to please buyers looking for more tangible talents as well.