Can the Mazda’s cheap $27,195 (post-credit) price justify its tiny 35.5-kWh battery and 100-mile EPA range?
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Having recently driven many of the latest and greatest EVs, I’d started to forget “range anxiety” was a thing. Then a Mazda MX-30 arrived in my driveway, all sexy long hood, coupey roofline, and two-tone (gray over Soul Red) paint. Waitaminit. I gotta drive 83 miles to Saginaw Monday. What’s the EPA range of this MX-30’s 35.5-kWh battery? Only 100 miles!?
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Look, anyone with a casual knowledge of EVs knows that 100 miles of driving range would have been middling for an affordable EV ten years ago; amongst today’s options and their 200-miles-plus figures, the Mazda is seriously lacking. But, hey, the EPA says the MX-30 can do 100 miles, and I’d be putting it to the test trying to achieve, well, 83 percent of that in the real world on a single charge.
Getting There
My Nexteer supplier hosts confirmed they had a level-two charger I could park at and charge with during our meeting, so I set off from suburban Detroit after having parked on my L2 garage charger overnight. The Mazda’s gauge showed 92 miles of range—not much reserve, so I locked the cruise at the 70-mph limit, with no heat or air conditioning (the 60-degree cloudy weather made this tolerable).
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Along the way, it was amusing to watch the MX-30’s native nav system announce all gas stations at every exit—the system is clearly borrowed from gas-fed models—but less so contending with the dearth of available energy-use screens or eco-driving coaches. There’s only a miles/kWh history bar graph and an info page that tells you how much range you’ll gain by switching off climate control. I arrived in Saginaw with the Mazda showing 12 miles of remaining range.
Getting Home
After an hour and 20 minutes on Nexteer’s L2 charger the MX-30 was showing 36 miles of range (and a low battery range warning). I programmed my home address into the native nav system and was surprised to get no “destination out of range” warning or suggested routing via chargers, widgets typically found in EVs. I found a list of chargers along the route in the POI menu, but the list was woefully out of date (Sirius XM can provide up-to-date listings, but the press-car’s subscription had expired), so I programmed my Waze app for the DC Fast-Charger I’d already determined to be closest to my route—33 miles south at the Flint airport. With only 3 miles of cushion, I tucked in to draft a semi going 65 mph to ensure I arrived with enough energy to find another charger if necessary.
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DC Fast Charging
Fortunately, the two ChargePoint units, located inside the airport’s short-term parking area (adding a $2 disincentive to their use) were both unoccupied and functional. The MX-30 is rated for 50 kW DC charging, but this 125 kW charger maxed at 35 kW, which added 21.89 kWh ($6.57) in 39 minutes. With an indicated 70 miles of range and only 58 miles to go, I felt emboldened to drive 80 mph with the climate control set to 68 degrees. Doing so consumed most of my range cushion and I arrived home with 3 miles to spare.
Is The Mazda MX-30 A Real EV?
It would have been an awesome EV—in 2010. In 2022, it’s impossible to excuse the two-digit real-world range with no apparent nav programming to facilitate route planning or eco-coaching to maximize the minimal range. Then there’s the cramped packaging, the enormous hood with no frunk (there is SO much air under there), the slow charging, etc.
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As Mazda’s first electrified vehicle, nearly every normal buyer will be able to get into one for just $27,195 after the $7,500 federal tax credit is applied. That—along with its styling—are its biggest selling features, now that other manufacturers selling out of their tax-credit allotments. As to whether it’s a real EV, we’ll say this: The MX-30 is electric, but it’s not very good at being electric. If your daily driving requirements don’t see much highway use and favor short trips, the price could be attractive; for everyone else, spend a little more and get, say, a Nissan Leaf or a Chevrolet Bolt, both of which offer over 200 miles of range for not much more money.