Mazda Australia doesnât need the same level of localised suspension and steering tuning as it Korean competitors since it doesnât suffer the same âperceivedâ ride and handling issues, the companyâs boss says.
Talking to CarAdvice in Hiroshima (Japan) last week, Martin Benders said while Mazda takes a great deal of interest in finding the ideal set of suspension and steering parameters for its Australian delivered products, it doesnât need to go the same lengths as the likes of Hyundai and Kia who have started a very specific localised tuning program for our market.
âThey had a perceived problem.â Benders told CarAdvice. âThat their cars didnât ride and handle quite so well. We donât have that problem.â
âWhenever we get any criticism itâs on the margin of being [not] quite as sharp or tight as they like and really most criticisms we get, model over model, is not whether we handle better or worse than the competition.â
âItâs a bit like them bringing out longer warranties because of perceived quality problems. We prefer to deliver the right product and just concentrate on delivering the right product.â
Australiaâs most popular car so far this year, the Mazda 3, has sold 18,465 units (January to May), compared to 12,449 for the Hyundai i30 (plus an additional 3,448 sales for the sedan variant, Hyundai Elantra).
Mazdaâs popularity in Australia continues to soar as the brand brings another generation of class-leading products and creeps its market position to a more premium offering.
The Mazda CX-5 continues as the best selling SUV in the country with 8,795 sales so far this year, leading the Toyota RAV4 (7,976) and Hyundai IX35 (7,275).
The Japanese brand has so far sold 42,536 cars in Australia this year â" only 1905 units behind second place Holden (Toyota remains dominant with 80,297).
Benders says that tuning for the sake of tuning is not what Mazda is all about in Australia.
âYou can tune and tune and tune until only the one percentile can recognise the difference. I donât know if we really need to get to that for our broad appeal models.â
Nonetheless, Mazda Australia does take all customer and media criticism onboard and with its importance growing in Japan, has an ever bigger say in future model development.
âIf we have a valid criticism, if itâs handling or NVH (noise, vibration and harshness), we will go back and slam as hard as the next guy, but its normally a marginal fix, a marginal requirement, itâs not a huge requirement.â
Benders said he doesnât think Mazda runs the risk of eventually falling behind the Koreans in terms of ride and handling with no Australian-centric tuning.
âI have seen the perception graphs on the difference in tuning on Mazda 3 between USA, Europe and Australia. Itâs so fine [that] you have to be a guy thatâs really into it [to tell the difference]. The average customer will recognise that it feels ok and it feels good. We aim at that level.â
The Mazda 3 tune is a mixture of European and US requirements, with the North American tune given more preference thanks to the regions speed limit and road quality similarities.
âIn Europe, itâs all gauged around the autobahn experience, because someone is going to drive 150-160km/h and you can tell the difference when it starts to get light at the front end and itâs not all that comfortable. In the U.S., itâs the Los Angeles freeways, so you tune the dampers and handling differently.â
âIn the old days we use to say âgive us the European tuneâ, but in fact the European tune is a bit too extreme for us, because who drives like that? The Average punter doesnât drive that fast in Australia. We have to be more tuned in to how sharp it feels in the range of speeds we are doing which is 60-120km/hâ
As the fourth-largest market for Mazda, its engineers visit Australia regularly to get a better understanding of our roads and Australian delivered Mazdaâs do actually carry a unique Australian tune, which is based on Mazdaâs data of our road surfaces and driving habits, but the specific models themselves are not generally tuned on our local roads.
The suspension and steering tune that makes it to cars delivered to Australia is set for local conditions based on a set of adjustable variables developed for the global market.
With the local manufacturing industry set to close up shop in the coming years, the importance of local tuning is going to come into question as more importer-only manufacturer aim to appeal to the Australian-centric requirement.
Should more manufacturers perform localised tuning for our market?
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