Rare Rides: The Xedos 6, a Small Luxury Mazda From 1996

Corey Lewis
by Corey Lewis

While researching information for the recently featured Mazda Lantis, your author came across some other Nineties forbidden fruit from the good people at Mazda. Particularly interesting was the Xedos 6, which, like the similar-looking Millennia, was also a part of Mazda’s early Nineties luxury push.

The Xedos was actually a range of two cars from Mazda, designed to appeal to the compact and midsize premium sedan customer globally. The smaller of the two was Xedos 6, but there was also the Xedos 9 – you’d call it Millennia. Both cars were also sold as Eunos models in the right-hand drive markets of Japan and Australia, where Eunos was launched as Mazda’s Lexus-fighting luxury brand. The 6 was the Eunos 500, and the 9 was the 800. We’ll leave the 9/800/Millennia for another day.

Xedos 6 was launched in 1992, after it was introduced in Eunos 500 form at the 1991 Tokyo Motor Show. Eunos versions were first up for production, along with other right-hand-drive versions for the UK, badged as Mazda Xedos. Left-hand drive versions did not enter production until 1993. At the time, Mazda planned to market the 6 under the Amati brand in certain markets (like the US), but for considerable economic reasons in Japan, that plan didn’t pan out. North America never received the premium compact Xedos 6.

Underneath the Xedos was a unique platform designated CA, which was developed solely for Eunos. Derived from the more plebeian 626 platform, it was also developed into the CB used for the previously featured Lantis. The car launched with a 2.0-liter 144-horsepower V6 which was not the same one used in the Lantis. Later on, a lesser 1.6-liter I4 arrived, which offered 114 horses. For the Japanese market, the 1.6 was skipped in favor of another tiny V6, which produced 138 horses from its 1.8 liters. After 1994, another new engine debuted as the base Japanese engine, a 1.8-liter I4. The final engine shuffling, the four-cylinder 1.8 replaced the V6 1.8. Transmissions on offer were a five-speed manual or four-speed automatic.

Labeling and dealership changes occurred in 1996, when Mazda discontinued the Eunos brand exercise. The 500 was renamed to Mazda Eunos 500, and brought back to Mazda dealers. It continued in production until 1999. Branding had returned to normal by the late Nineties, luxury aspirations dashed. The official replacement for the Xedos 6 was the 626/Capella.

Today’s Rare Ride is for sale in the sunny south of France. With V6, 127,000 miles, and manual transmission it asks $3,651.

[Images: seller]

Corey Lewis
Corey Lewis

Interested in lots of cars and their various historical contexts. Started writing articles for TTAC in late 2016, when my first posts were QOTDs. From there I started a few new series like Rare Rides, Buy/Drive/Burn, Abandoned History, and most recently Rare Rides Icons. Operating from a home base in Cincinnati, Ohio, a relative auto journalist dead zone. Many of my articles are prompted by something I'll see on social media that sparks my interest and causes me to research. Finding articles and information from the early days of the internet and beyond that covers the little details lost to time: trim packages, color and wheel choices, interior fabrics. Beyond those, I'm fascinated by automotive industry experiments, both failures and successes. Lately I've taken an interest in AI, and generating "what if" type images for car models long dead. Reincarnating a modern Toyota Paseo, Lincoln Mark IX, or Isuzu Trooper through a text prompt is fun. Fun to post them on Twitter too, and watch people overreact. To that end, the social media I use most is Twitter, @CoreyLewis86. I also contribute pieces for Forbes Wheels and Forbes Home.

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  • Wolf Wolf on Dec 30, 2020

    For Euro-standards, this car is not-so-old, and "quite powerful". Anything above 100/110HP is going to cost more in insurance. Driver licence is at 18 in France, and until 25 quite costly. Many drivers will stick with cars in the 40-60HP range until 21 at least. The median price for the first/second car is more in the 1000-2000 Euro range, with a focus on small cars. Gasoline is currently at 6.5USD/Gallon, and minimum wa Cars like the Peugeot 106 will drive at 85Mph for hours with 60HP. This car will more surely find a Mazda enthusiast looking for a cheap car and with some years of insurance bonus.

  • Wolf Wolf on Dec 30, 2020

    For Euro-standards, this car is not-so-old, and "quite powerful". Anything above 100/110HP is going to cost more in insurance. Driver licence is at 18 in France, and until 25 quite costly. Many drivers will stick with cars in the 40-60HP range until 21 at least. The median price for the first/second car is more in the 1000-2000 Euro range, with a focus on small cars. Gasoline is currently at 6.5USD/Gallon, and minimum wage at 1500$/month. Cars like the Peugeot 106 will drive at 85Mph for hours with 60HP. This car will more surely find a Mazda enthusiast looking for a cheap car and with some years of insurance bonus.

  • Mike-NB2 This is a mostly uninformed vote, but I'll go with the Mazda 3 too.I haven't driven a new Civic, so I can't say anything about it, but two weeks ago I had a 2023 Corolla as a rental. While I can understand why so many people buy these, I was surprised at how bad the CVT is. Many rentals I've driven have a CVT and while I know it has one and can tell, they aren't usually too bad. I'd never own a car with a CVT, but I can live with one as a rental. But the Corolla's CVT was terrible. It was like it screamed "CVT!" the whole time. On the highway with cruise control on, I could feel it adjusting to track the set speed. Passing on the highway (two-lane) was risky. The engine isn't under-powered, but the CVT makes it seem that way.A minor complaint is about the steering. It's waaaay over-assisted. At low speeds, it's like a 70s LTD with one-finger effort. Maybe that's deliberate though, given the Corolla's demographic.
  • Mike-NB2 2019 Ranger - 30,000 miles / 50,000 km. Nothing but oil changes. Original tires are being replaced a week from Wednesday. (Not all that mileage is on the original A/S tires. I put dedicated winter rims/tires on it every winter.)2024 - Golf R - 1700 miles / 2800 km. Not really broken in yet. Nothing but gas in the tank.
  • SaulTigh I've got a 2014 F150 with 87K on the clock and have spent exactly $4,180.77 in maintenance and repairs in that time. That's pretty hard to beat.Hard to say on my 2019 Mercedes, because I prepaid for three years of service (B,A,B) and am getting the last of those at the end of the month. Did just drop $1,700 on new Michelins for it at Tire Rack. Tires for the F150 late last year were under $700, so I'd say the Benz is roughly 2 to 3 times as pricy for anything over the Ford.I have the F150 serviced at a large independent shop, the Benz at the dealership.
  • Bike Rather have a union negotiating my pay rises with inflation at the moment.
  • Bike Poor Redapple won't be sitting down for a while after opening that can of Whiparse
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