Mazda EV Takes Shape Ahead of Tokyo Reveal

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Mazda’s upcoming electric vehicle sheds its cloaking in Tokyo on October 23rd, becoming the first mass-market EV from the gas-loving brand. While the automaker hasn’t provided much in the way of details on the model’s layout, the fact that it chose a CX-30 crossover as a test mule for the brand’s in-house-developed powertrain suggests a crossover is on the way.

On Tuesday, the automaker afforded viewers a peek inside the upcoming vehicle.

Promising “a unique sense of openness and connection,” Mazda boasted of the model’s sustainable furnishings, with materials “carefully selected for their unique texture and quality.” Surely this will have TTAC readers salivating at the thought of cork. Yes, there’ll be much cork.

Mazda designers are known for their obsessive focus on harmonious cabin environments, taking great pains in selecting the right materials to compliment a model’s design language. To give the cabin of the small, unnamed EV a sense of openness, Mazda opted for a svelte, floating center console, seen here in a side profile. Clearly, the brand’s sticking with its rotary dial-actuated infotainment system.

In September, Mazda showed off its CX-30-based e-TPV prototype, allowing journos to take the front-drive vehicle for a spin to gauge the tech’s suitability. The powertrain’s output wasn’t overwhelming. A relatively small 35.5 kWh battery pack fueled a single electric motor rated for 141 horsepower and 195 lb-ft of torque. Just the kind of output you’d expect to find in a small EV.

Mazda stressed at the time that the e-TPV was not the production vehicle headed for the Tokyo Motor Show, though it stands to reason that the automaker would go for maximum utility and consumer appeal by opting for a crossover bodystyle. While the vehicle’s battery pack wouldn’t afford the kind of range preferred by American consumers (overseas specs put it at 124 miles), the brand’s range-extender (a rotary engine, disconnected from the drive wheels, that serves as a generator) will help the vehicle go the distance after the battery pack taps out.

We’ll know more about the Mazda EV before long.

[Image: Mazda]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • Ajla Ajla on Oct 15, 2019

    "The powertrain’s output wasn’t overwhelming." Still a Mazda. If they do sell this in the US I expect it will be the slowest BEV in the market.

  • Imnormlurnot Imnormlurnot on Oct 15, 2019

    Spiderman?

  • 3-On-The-Tree In my life before the military I was a firefighter EMT and for the majority of the car accidents that we responded to ALCOHOL and drugs was the main factor. All the suggested limitations from everyone above don’t matter if there is a drunken/high fool behind the wheel. Again personal responsibility.
  • Wjtinfwb NONE. Vehicle tech is not the issue. What is the issue is we give a drivers license to any moron who can fog a mirror. Then don't even enforce that requirement or the requirement to have auto insurance is you have a car. The only tech I could get behind is to override the lighting controls so that headlights and taillights automatically come on at dusk and in sync with wipers. I see way too many cars after dark without headlights, likely due to the automatic control being overridden and turned to "Off". The current trend of digital or electro-luminescent dashboards exacerbates this as the dash is illuminated, fooling a driver into thinking the headlights are on.
  • Kjhkjlhkjhkljh kljhjkhjklhkjh given the increasing number of useless human scumbags who use their phones while driving (when it is not LIFE AND DEATH EMERGENCY) there has to be a trade off.It is either this, or make phone use during driving a moving violation that can suspend a license.
  • Wjtinfwb Great. Another Solyndra boondoggle wasting the tax dollars we contribute and further digging us into debt. The saying, "don't listen to what they say, watch what they do" has never been more accurate. All this BS talk about "preserving Democracy" and "level playing fields" are just words. The actions say, "we don't give a damn about democracy, we want to pick the winners and use the taxpayer revenue to do it". 100 million is chump change in auto development and manufacturing and doling that out in 300k increments is just a colossal waste. Nothing happens in a large manufacturing enterprise for 300k., it's a rounding error. A symbolic gesture. Ford and GM likely spend 300k designing a new logo for the 12V battery that runs your radio. For EV development it's a fart in a Hurricane.
  • Bd2 Let's Go Brandon!
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