Long-form

Long-form blog posts and editorials. Topics cover both personal and the world at large. 

Intro: 2016 Mazda MX-5 Miata

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While I’ve thoroughly enjoyed my time with the WRX STI, after three year of blissful ownership it was time to move on. You can read all about it in a previous blog post. To sum it up, the STI is a very rapid point-A to point-B car indeed, but its numerous small faults and shortcomings squandered away any confidence I had in the car, and thus it was on to the next. 

Having owned front-driven and all-wheel drive cars, the next logical destination was a rear-wheel drive sports car. From the very first moment Mazda released the details on the new ND MX-5 Miata, I was hooked. Only the fourth new generation in its illustrious 25-year existence, the ND’s exterior styling finally departed from the signature ‘cute’ of the previous models into something decidedly modern and purposeful. What really sold me however was the 100kg diet from the NC, and - rare in a modern car - dimensionally smaller than the old car.

The only question was whether or not I’d fit in one. My 5’10” frame with an unnaturally long torso prevented me from fitting properly in the NC MX-5. Seated in the optimal position, my eyes were level with the top of the windscreen, which obviously isn’t very safe at all. Thankfully, I fit in ND quite well, with a one-and-a-half finger gap between the top of my head and the fabric roof. So with the knowledge that I can fit, I acquired a 2016 Mazda MX-5 Miata Sport a bit over three weeks ago.

The ND is available in three trim levels: Sport, Club, and Grand Touring. All are motivated by the same 155hp SKYACTIV 2.0L four-cylinder engine and power sent to the rear wheels. The Club trim adds 17inch wheels, Bilstein shocks, torsen limited-slip differential, Mazda Connect infotainment system, and optional forged BBS alloys with 4-pot Brembo front brakes. The Grand Touring does without the trick dampers and locking diff, and instead provides customers with comfort items such as blind spot monitoring (in a Miata?) and cross-traffic alert, auto adaptive headlamps, heated leather seats, and automatic climate control.

The reason I chose the Sport was primarily due to not wanting to pay the almost $3,000 extra for the Club spec (the BBS and Brembo package is another $3,000 on top of that). As a car enthusiast of course I’d love to have all those performance addenda, but paying over $30,000 for an MX-5 just feels wrong. I’ve no need for the fancy infotainment system, as the ability to connect an iPhone via Bluetooth is plenty enough for music and navigation (contemporary infotainment systems still pale in comparison to the modern smartphone for speed and ease of use). The Grand Touring is even dearer in price than the Club, and for a car whose developmental philosophy is trimming weight by the gram (the ‘gram strategy’), the luxurious amenities offered in the GT seems entirely counterintuitive. No thank you.

Besides, the MX-5 Sport’s 16 inch wheels with 195 section tires is a proper laugh in the face of ever increasing wheel and tire sizes in performance cars (boggles my mind a Porsche GT3 RS runs a 21inch wheel), and I absolutely adore them. Ticking the box for either the Club or Grand Touring would’ve lost me those wonderful donuts. I’ll find out in the ownership term if running economy car-sized wheels is any detriment to the thrill of driving.

My Ceramic Metallic (that’s silver in Mazda speak) MX-5 has but one option: the $130 advance keyless entry. It allows access to the doors and trunk-lid, and operates the engine all without me having to take the key-fob out of my pocket. I normally wouldn’t tick the box for non-essential options like advance keyless, but purchasing an absolute poverty-spec ND MX-5 at this time would entail waiting two additional months for one to be ordered from Hiroshima. The final damage to wallet for the car came in at $25,865.

Much like how automotive magazines do long-term car tests, I’ll be doing monthly updates on this blog about my ownership experience with the Miata, and will expand upon the varying details of the car, how it drives, the quirks and criticisms as the months roll by. For now, in the brief few weeks I’ve owned the car, I’m massively enjoying the car’s lightweight demeanor, sharp steering, comfortable seats, and just about the best manual gearbox I’ve ever rowed. The top comes down, too, which is an altogether different experience indeed. Stay tuned. 

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Date acquired: November 2015
Total mileage: 485
Mileage this month: 485
Costs this month: $0
MPG this month: 31

Now I'm on the outside - 10 things I think

10 THINGS I THINK

1. Baseball is back! San Francisco Giants pitchers and catchers reported to spring training today. After winning three championships in five years, I've got zero expectations for this year. I'm merely going to enjoy the games I get to watch and/or attend. Can't wait to head down to Arizona in a little over a fortnight's time.  

2. With John Oliver locked down at HBO for the next three years and Jessica Williams removing herself from the running for host, I'm not exactly excited now about the future prospects of The Daily Show after Jon Stewarts departs.

3. Still haven't yet had the time to watch the nearly three hours of SNL40 show, but that Celebrity Jeopardy sketch is everything. Will Ferrell as Trebek, Darrell Hammond as Sean Connery, Kate McKinnon as Justin Bieber, Alec Baldwin as Tony Bennet, Norm McDonald as Burt Reynolds, Taran Killam as Christoph Waltz, and Jim Carrey as Matthew McConaughey; the whole of them absolutely nailed it. 

4. Even when you don't plan for car shopping to take up the entire day, even when you've done all your due diligence and the negotiations was a cinch, you'll still find yourself at the dealership until the sun goes down. I'm so glad when I bought my car I did it all through email; I merely had to sign and pay the down-payment when I went to the dealership to pick up the car. 

5. Those of you who live in the San Francisco Bay Area, I wholly recommend BMW of Mountain View for all your Bavarian motor shopping needs. On the same token, I my regard cannot be lower for the inattentive and mannerless pricks over at Peter Pan BMW. 

6. East coast is seeing record snow and well below zero temps, and meanwhile me the asshole here in San Francisco is complaining about mid-70s weather in the middle of February. 

Typical San Franciscan, right? 70 is to hot, 50 is too cold, and 60 is just right. You know what though, we certainly pay for the privilege to complain. Those of you who live in places with harsher climate extremes, spare me your consternation. 

7. I've zero patience to sit through adverts at the beginning of videos online. If you want me to watch your product/show/clip you need to show me something first before bombarding me with useless pander. What ever happened to placing the ads on the sides of the webpage?

8. Articles about how unhealthy Chipotle really is have been popping up lately, and I couldn't care less. I'll still eat there every chance I get. Being Chinese my body is accustomed to a sodium-heavy diet so it's no consequence at all that a typical Chipotle burrito has got enough sodium to satisfy an entire daily intake. The point is, sure that burrito bowl may contain 1,500 calories, but when I eat one of those the only other meal I have for the day is a light dinner or breakfast. That's it. Of course you'll get fat if you eat at chipotle and have two big square meals along with it. 

Law of thermodynamics, folks. It's really that simple. 

9. I rather America build the Keystone XL pipeline than risk having to carry oil from Canada on freight trains that's got to travel through communities, towns, and cities. Such a volatile substance should not be carried in large quantities on a mode of transport that is prone to accidents. 

10. I don't subscribe to the notion of "spend money on experiences, not things." I say, why not spend money on both? Deeply trenched materialism is awful yes, but there's nothing wrong with purchasing a few things if it does indeed make you happy. The key is to properly use the items you buy; a $3,000 Mac Pro that you only use to surf the web and watch youtube videos is a tremendous waste.