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    SUV with the soul of a sedan. The Mazda CX-9’s styling can be billed as a Mazda 6 on an SUV chassis.

    Text and photos by Jude Morte
     

    CROSSOVER SUVs have been prevalent in the country in the past two years, and Mazda has its own take on it with the CX-9.

    The CX-9 is Motor Trend’s 2007 SUV of the Year, and based on looks alone, it’s not difficult to fathom. The overall design can be pegged as a Mazda 6 on an SUV chassis, with steeply raked A-pillars combining with the 10-spoke, 20-inch rims and twin exhausts to give the vehicle a large sporty dose. It would be better, though, if Mazda went with a monotone approach instead of making the lowermost body cladding black, as the result makes the SUV look more like an off-roader.    

    The interior also has a heavy Mazda 6 influence, as seen in the dashboard gauge cluster, steering wheel, A/T gate, aircon and radio-control designs. One problem is ingress and egress, as the low ceiling and roofline can be a hindrance. You actually must bend your head down 10 to 15 degrees to get your whole upper body into the cabin. Another problem is the weak air conditioning, which blows decent cool air at the blower two setting; it’s a good thing Mazda installed large second-row and third-row aircon vents to keep all occupants cool.

    The CX-9 isn’t lacking when it comes to small item storage, but it isn’t exceptional, either. The center console doesn’t have the deep storage that you get in the Ford Explorer or Expedition, but you have 12 cupholders and large door storage bins. Both rear rows fold flat, and can swallow three large balikbayan boxes plus three to four large travel bags.    

    The local market is fortunate to get the 3.7L V6 instead of the 3.5L V6 that came with the SUV’s first iteration. The former gets into the powerband early (2,750 to 3,200 rpm), complemented excellently by the all-wheel drive and six-speed A/T. The latter changes gears crisply without any shift shock, and downshifts quickly at one-half throttle effort. Sadly, the governor limits top speed to 180 kph, the CX-9 is not built for off-roading due to a low 204-mm ground clearance and 20-inch rims and the tested 6 km/l on four days of mixed driving is not exactly fuel-efficient.

    Mazda went to lengths to make the CX-9 fun to drive, and it shows in its road enthusiasm. The car-like unibody feels rigid, and the four-wheel independent suspension is tuned for sporting responses, with minute body roll and controlled ride motions. The SUV’s safety net includes dynamic stability control, or DSC (breaking grip at 80 to 85 kph with it turned off), just as it should in a vehicle this size. It lets you have more fun than any three-row SUV, but the DSC reminds you that there’s a handling limit. Unfortunately, the CX-9’s stiff-legged response to speed bumps isn’t very kind to those in the third row, and the steering is very heavy at low speeds.

    Safety is a love-hate matter. The brake pedal always feels reassuringly firm underfoot, yet the effort level never makes braking a chore, even in stop-and-go traffic. The 5.7-meter turning radius is great for shooting through the small U-turn slots along Aurora Boulevard, and exterior/interior lighting is bright. Parallel parking can be tough, however, as the sharp angle of the C-pillars results in a number of rearward blind spots. Irksome also is the lack of backup sensors and side mirrors with narrow latitude sight.    

    Mazda Philippines’ first venture into the crossover segment is a good one, but it needs to get over some serious performance and safety issues, otherwise, it could get all crossed up in an increasingly popular segment.  

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