Our route in the 1.5 started in miserable traffic, but even in stop-start stuff the car impressed. A light clutch, rorty engine note, predictable throttle response and a short, tight gearshift make it feel at ease even in such mundane, generally frustrating progress.
Get it out on a decent rural road and it absolutely sings. As you’d expect, the naturally aspirated engine makes for a supremely linear, long-revving power delivery that welcomes being wrung out to the 7000rpm redline. Low-powered or not, you only need one corner and one sprint through second gear to know that this is a proper sports car, by any definition.
However, the 1.5 is at its happiest when you keep it on the boil through the high mid-range, where it feels fast enough, yet completely predictable and unintimidating. Sure, this engine doesn’t serve up scorching pace, but because you can enjoy using 100% of the performance in all sorts of situations, with pedals well placed for heeling-and-toeing, it brings zeal to a road that would most likely feel ordinary in plenty of other sporting models.
Yet, a fizzy engine is nothing without the handling to go with it, and here the 1.5 MX-5 is a gem. The steering offers a sense of connection that gives you complete confidence in what’s going on where rubber meets road, and there’s loads of grip, which means you can really lean on it through corners, even on damp, uneven roads. If it does start to lose traction, you get plenty of warning, or if you’re looking for oversteer moments then it’ll do that progressively, albeit with a fair amount of provocation.
Ultimately, the 1.5 is a fluid-feeling thing and an absolute joy to drive, even at licence-friendly speeds. Even the ride quality is well sorted. You get a bit of a shiver and thump over coarse intrusions, but most of the time the 1.5 is composed and quite refined for a lightweight soft-top. We even saw an indicated 40mpg, which is no small achievement, given the heavy use it saw over our long route.
Our only real criticism is that the body movement on this model is quite pronounced, with noticeable float over fast undulations, and you’re aware of the car’s weight moving about even in moderately fast switchbacks. Maybe we’d also like a touch more conviction to the steering around the straight-ahead at motorway speeds.
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The car may be sporty but it seems the drivers aren't
Fun and sporty below the limits
I see your point and I wouldn
The thing is, this is usable every day
I'm guessing Mazda did market