Coordinates: 34°22′37″N 132°30′03″E / 34.3770577°N 132.5008222°E
Headquarters in Fuchū, Japan (2020) |
|
Native name |
マツダ株式会社 |
---|---|
Romanized name |
Matsuda Kabushiki-Gaisha |
Type | Public (K.K.) |
Traded as |
TYO: 7261 |
Industry | Automotive |
Founded | 30 January 1920; 102 years ago |
Founder | Jujiro Matsuda |
Headquarters | 3-1 Shinchi, Fuchū, Hiroshima, Japan |
Area served |
Worldwide |
Key people |
Kiyotaka Shobuda (Chairman) Akira Marumoto (President and CEO) |
Products | Motor vehicles, engines (1,202,489 units, 2016) |
Revenue | ¥3.4 trillion (FY 2016)[1] |
Operating income |
¥22.6 billion (FY 2016)[1] |
Net income |
¥13.4 billion (FY 2016)[1] |
Owners | Japan Trustee Services Bank (6.3%) Toyota Motor Corporation (5%)[2] The Master Trust Bank of Japan (4.7%) Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (2.2%) |
Number of employees |
46,398 (2016) |
Website | www.mazda.com |
Mazda Motor Corporation (Japanese: マツダ株式会社, Hepburn: Matsuda Kabushiki-Gaisha), commonly referred to as simply Mazda, is a Japanese multinational automotive manufacturer headquartered in Fuchū, Hiroshima, Japan.[4]
In 2015, Mazda produced 1.5 million vehicles for global sales, the majority of which (nearly one million) were produced in the company’s Japanese plants, with the remainder coming from a variety of other plants worldwide.[5] During this time, Mazda was the 15th-largest automaker in terms of production globally.[6]
History
Creation
The first registered corporate logo, which appeared on three-wheel trucks in 1936.
The first stylized branding. The three mountains (representing Hiroshima) also form the Latin alphabet letter M, which is duplicated three times for «Mazda Motor Manufacturer». The long side extensions represent wings for agility and speed.
Mazda began as the Toyo Cork Kogyo Co., Ltd, as a cork-making factory founded in Hiroshima, Japan, 30 January 1920. Toyo Cork Kogyo renamed itself to Toyo Kogyo Co., Ltd. in 1927. In the late 1920s the company had to be saved from bankruptcy by Hiroshima Saving Bank and other business leaders in Hiroshima.[7]
In 1931, Toyo Kogyo moved from manufacturing machine tools to vehicles with the introduction of the Mazda-Go auto rickshaw. The name Mazda came into existence with the production of the company’s first three-wheeled trucks. Other candidates for a model name included Sumera-Go, Tenshi-Go, and more.[8]
Officially, the company states:
Mazda comes from Ahura Mazda, the god of harmony, intelligence and wisdom from the earliest civilization in West Asia. Key members of Toyo Kogyo interpreted Mazda as a symbol of the beginning of the East and the West civilization, but also a symbol of the automotive civilization and culture.»[9]
The company’s website further notes that the name also derives from the name of the company’s founder, Jujiro Matsuda.[10] The alternative proposed names mean «god» (Sumera) and «angel» (Tenshi); both indicate Matsuda’s strong interest in human faith.[11]
The Mazda lettering was used in combination with the corporate emblem of Mitsubishi Motors, which was responsible for sales, to produce the Toyo Kogyo three-wheeled truck registered trademark.[12]
Toyo Kogyo produced weapons for the Japanese military throughout the Second World War, most notably the series 30 through 35 Type 99 rifle. The company formally adopted the Mazda name in 1984, though every automobile sold from the beginning bore that name. The Mazda R360 was introduced in 1960, followed by the Mazda Carol in 1962 and were sold at a specific retail dealership that sold passenger cars called «Mazda Auto Store» whereas commercial products were sold at «Mazda Store». As Mazda continued to offer passenger cars like the Savanna, Familia, Luce, Cosmo and Capella, they were added to the «Mazda Auto Store» network only.[13]
Wankel engine adoption
Symbol and corporate mark as seen on most Mazda cars from the Mazda R360 until 1975
Beginning in the 1960s, Mazda was inspired by the NSU Ro 80 and decided to put a major engineering effort into development of the Wankel rotary engine as a way of differentiating itself from other Japanese auto companies. The company formed a business relationship with German company NSU and began with the limited-production Cosmo Sport of 1967, and continuing to the present day with the Pro Mazda Championship, Mazda has become the sole manufacturer of Wankel-type engines for the automotive market, mainly by way of attrition. (NSU and Citroën both gave up on the design during the 1970s, and prototype Corvette efforts by General Motors never made it to production.)
This effort to bring attention to itself apparently helped, as Mazda rapidly began to export its vehicles. Both piston-powered and rotary-powered models made their way around the world. The rotary models quickly became popular for their combination of good power and light weight when compared to piston-engined competitors that required heavier V6 or V8 engines to produce the same power. The R100 and the RX series (RX-2, RX-3, and RX-4) led the company’s export efforts.
During 1968, Mazda started formal operations in Canada (MazdaCanada) although Mazdas were seen in Canada as early as 1959. In 1970, Mazda formally entered the American market (Mazda North American Operations) and was very successful there, going so far as to create the Mazda Rotary Pickup (based on the conventional piston-powered B-Series model) solely for North American buyers. To this day, Mazda remains the only automaker to have produced a Wankel-powered pickup truck. Additionally, it is also the only marque to have ever offered a rotary-powered bus (the Mazda Parkway, offered only in Japan) or station wagon (within the RX-3 and RX-4 lines for certain markets). After nine years of development, Mazda finally launched its new model in the U.S. in 1970.[14]
Mazda’s rotary success continued until the onset of the 1973 oil crisis. As American buyers (as well as those in other nations) quickly turned to vehicles with better fuel efficiency, the relatively thirsty rotary-powered models began to fall out of favor. Combined with being the least-efficient automaker in Japan (in terms of productivity), inability to adjust to excess inventory and over-reliance on the U.S. market, the company suffered a huge loss in 1975.[15][16] An already heavily indebted Toyo Kogyo was on the verge of bankruptcy and was only saved through the intervention of Sumitomo keiretsu group, namely Sumitomo Bank, and the company’s subcontractors and distributors.[17][18] However, the company had not totally turned its back on piston engines, as it continued to produce a variety of four-cylinder models throughout the 1970s. The smaller Familia line in particular became very important to Mazda’s worldwide sales after 1973, as did the somewhat larger Capella series.
Mazda RX-7 (first generation)
Mazda refocused its efforts and made the rotary engine a choice for the sporting motorist rather than a mainstream powerplant. Starting with the lightweight RX-7 in 1978 and continuing with the modern RX-8, Mazda has continued its dedication to this unique powerplant. This switch in focus also resulted in the development of another lightweight sports car, the piston-powered Mazda MX-5 Miata (sold as the Eunos and later Mazda Roadster in Japan), inspired by the concept ‘jinba ittai’. Introduced in 1989 to worldwide acclaim, the Roadster has been widely credited with reviving the concept of the small sports car after its decline in the late 1970s.
Partnership with Ford
From 1974 to 2015, Mazda had a partnership with the Ford Motor Company, which acquired a 24.5% stake in 1979, upped to a 33.4% ownership of Mazda in May 1995.[19] Under the administration of Alan Mulally, Ford gradually divested its stake in Mazda from 2008 to 2015, with Ford holding 2.1% of Mazda stock as of 2014[20] and severing most production as well as development ties.
This partnership with Ford began owing to Mazda’s financial difficulties during the 1960s. Starting in 1979 by expanding their 7 percent financial stake to 24.5%, Ford expanded an existing partnership with Mazda, resulting in various joint projects. The cooperation had begun in 1971 when the Mazda B-Series spawned a Ford Courier variant for North America, a version which was later offered in other markets as well. Mazda’s Bongo and Titan cab-over trucks were sold with Ford badging in mainly Asia and the Pacific region beginning in 1976.[21] These included large and small efforts in all areas of the automotive landscape, most notably in the realm of pickup trucks and smaller cars. Mazda began supplying manual transaxles to Ford in the spring of 1980.[21] Mazda’s Familia platform was used for Ford models like the Laser and Escort beginning in 1980, while the Capella architecture found its way into Ford’s Telstar sedan and Probe sports models.
During the 1980s, Ford-badged Mazda products replaced much of their own European-sourced lineup, especially in the Asia-Pacific markets, with the Laser replacing the Escort[22] and the Telstar replacing the Cortina.[23] In some cases, such as New Zealand and South Africa, these were assembled alongside their Mazda-badged equivalents, the Mazda 323 (Familia) and 626 (Capella).
Following the closure of its own assembly plant in New Zealand, Mazda established a joint venture with Ford New Zealand known as Vehicle Assemblers of New Zealand (VANZ), while in South Africa, Ford’s local subsidiary merged with Sigma Motor Corporation, which already assembled Mazdas in the country, to form Samcor, although the sharing of models proved unpopular with both Ford and Mazda customers.[24] In other markets such as Australia, however, the 323 and 626 were always fully imported, with only the Laser and Telstar assembled locally.[25] In Japan, the Laser and Telstar were also sold alongside their Mazda-badged brethren, but the Festiva was not sold as a Mazda 121 on the Japanese market.
In North America, the Probe was built in a new Mazda company plant in Flat Rock, Michigan, along with the mainstream 626 sedan and a companion Mazda MX-6 sports coupe. Ford also lent Mazda some of its capacity when needed: the Mazda 121 sold in Europe and South Africa was, for a time, a variant of the Ford Fiesta built in plants in Europe and South Africa. Mazda also made an effort in the past to sell some of Ford’s cars in Japan, mainly through its Autorama dealer group.
In 1991, Mazda adopted a corporate symbol which was to represent a sun and a flame standing for heartfelt passion. This is commonly referred to in Mazda enthusiast circles as the «cylon» logo.[26]
Shortly after the release of the new symbol, the design was smoothed out to reduce its similarity to Renault’s. This is sometimes referred to as the «eternal flame» logo. It also represented the design of the rotary engine that Mazda was famous for.
The brand symbol, adopted in 1997, with the V-shape wings inside, standing for “growth” and “improvement” and Mazda logo in Mazda blue.[27] A slightly modified version was introduced in 2015.
Mazda also helped Ford develop the 1991 Explorer, which Mazda sold as the 2-door only Mazda Navajo from 1991 through 1994. However, Mazda’s version was unsuccessful, while the Ford (available from the start as a 4-door or 2-door model) instantly became the best-selling sport-utility vehicle in the United States and kept that title for over a decade.[28] Mazda has used Ford’s Ranger pickup as the basis for its North American–market B-Series trucks, starting in 1994 and continuing through 2010, when Mazda discontinued importing its B-Series trucks to North America, due to costs associated with the chicken tax.[29]
Following its long-held fascination with alternative engine technology, Mazda introduced the first Miller cycle engine for automotive use in the Millenia luxury sedan of 1995. Though the Millenia (and its Miller-type V6 engine) were discontinued in 2002, the company has recently introduced a much smaller Miller-cycle four-cylinder engine for use in its Demio starting in 2008. As with its leadership in Wankel technology, Mazda remains (so far) the only automaker to have used a Miller-cycle engine in the automotive realm.
Further financial difficulties at Mazda during the 1990s (partly caused by losses related to the 1997 Asian financial crisis[citation needed]) caused Ford to increase its stake to a 33.4-percent controlling interest in May 1996. In June 1996, Henry Wallace was appointed president, and he set about restructuring Mazda and setting it on a new strategic direction. He laid out a new direction for the brand including the design of the present Mazda marque; he laid out a new product plan to achieve synergies with Ford, and he launched Mazda’s digital innovation program to speed up the development of new products. At the same time, he started taking control of overseas distributors, rationalized dealerships and manufacturing facilities, and driving much-needed efficiencies and cost reductions in Mazda’s operations. Much of his early work put Mazda back into profitability and laid the foundations for future success. Wallace was succeeded by James Miller in November 1997, followed in December 1999 by Ford executive Mark Fields, who has been credited with expanding Mazda’s new product lineup and leading the turnaround during the early 2000s. Ford’s increased influence during the 1990s allowed Mazda to claim another distinction in history, having maintained the first foreign-born head of a Japanese car company, Henry Wallace.
Divestment by Ford
Amid the world financial crisis in the fall of 2008, reports emerged that Ford was contemplating a sale of its stake in Mazda as a way of streamlining its asset base.[30] BusinessWeek explained the alliance between Ford and Mazda has been a very successful one, with Mazda saving perhaps $90 million a year in development costs and Ford «several times» that, and that a sale of its stake in Mazda would be a desperate measure.[31] On November 18, 2008, Ford announced that it would sell a 20% stake in Mazda, reducing its stake to 13.4%, thus surrendering control of the company, which it held since 1996.[32][33] The following day, Mazda announced that, as part of the deal, it was buying back 6.8% of its shares from Ford for about US$185 million while the rest would be acquired by business partners of the company.[34] It was also reported that Hisakazu Imaki would be stepping down as chief executive, to be replaced by Takashi Yamanouchi.[35] On November 18, 2010, Ford reduced its stake further to 3%, citing the reduction of ownership would allow greater flexibility to pursue growth in emerging markets, and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group was believed to become its largest shareholder. Ford and Mazda remained strategic partners through joint ventures and exchanges of technological information.[36][37]
Mazda’s first mass-produced electric car, the MX-30
On September 30, 2015, when Ford’s shares had sunk to a little over 2% due to stock dilution, Ford sold its remaining shares in Mazda.[38]
Post-Ford efforts
In 2011, Mazda raised more than 150 billion yen (US$1.9 billion) in a record share sale to replenish capital, as it suffered its biggest annual loss in 11 years. Part of the proceeds were used to build an auto plant in Salamanca, Mexico.[39] The Mexican plant was built jointly by the company and Sumitomo Corporation.[40]
In May 2015, the company signed an agreement with Toyota to form a «long-term partnership», that would, among others, see Mazda supply Toyota with fuel-efficient SkyActiv gasoline and diesel engine technology in exchange for hydrogen fuel cell systems.[41]
Marques
Mazda tried using a number of different marques in the Japanese (and occasionally Australian) markets in the 1990s, including Autozam, Eunos, and ɛ̃fini. The motivation was brought on by market competition from other Japanese automakers efforts in offering vehicles at multiple Japanese dealership networks offered by Toyota, Nissan, and Honda. Mazda’s implementation of brand diversification reflected a Japanese engineering philosophy, called Kansei engineering, which was used as an advertising slogan in North America.
One of the oddest sub-marques was M2, used on three rare variants of the Eunos Roadster (the M2-1001, M2-1002 and M2-1028) and one of the Autozam AZ-1 (M2-1015). M2 even had its own avant-garde company headquarters, but was shut down after a very short period of operation.
In early 1992, Mazda planned to release a luxury marque, Amati, to challenge Acura, Infiniti, and Lexus in North America, which was to begin selling in late 1993. The initial Amati range would have included the Amati 500 (which became the Eunos 800 in Japan and Australia, Mazda Millenia in the U.S., and Mazda Xedos 9 in Europe), a rebadged version of the Mazda Cosmo and the Amati 1000 (a rear-wheel drive V12 competitor to the Lexus LS400[42]). The Amati marque was eventually scrapped before any cars hit the market. It is perhaps just a curiosity, but «Amati» happens to be an anagram of «Miata».
In Europe, the Xedos name was also associated with the Mazda Xedos 6, the two models were in production from 1992 until 1997. The Xedos line was marketed under the Mazda marque, and used the Mazda badge from the corresponding years.
This diversification stressed the product development groups at Mazda past its limits. Instead of having a half-dozen variations on any given platform, developers were asked to work on dozens of different models at the same time. Consumers were confused as well by the explosion of similar new models. This selective marketing experiment was ended in the mid-1990s due to economic conditions, largely attributed to the collapse of the Japanese asset price bubble in 1991.
Leadership
- Jujiro Matsuda (1920–1951)
- Tsuneji Matsuda (1952–1970)
- Kouhei Matsuda (1970–1977)
- Yoshiki Yamasaki (1977–1984)
- Kenichi Yamamoto (1984–1987)
- Masanori Furuta (1987–1991)
- Yoshihiro Wada (1991–1996)
- Henry Wallace (1996–1997, appointed by Ford Motor Company, first non-Japanese CEO of a Japanese automaker)
- James E. Miller (1997–1999)
- Mark Fields (1999–2002)
- Lewis Booth (2002–2003)
- Hisakazu Imaki (2003–2008)
- Takashi Yamanouchi (2008–2013)
- Masamichi Kogai (2013–present)
Markets
As of January 2022, the United States is Mazda’s biggest market, followed by China and Japan.[43] Mazda’s market share in the U.S. fell to a 10-year low of 1.7 percent in 2016.[44] Mazda’s brand loyalty was 39 percent in 2016, below the industry average of 53 percent.[45] On October 24, 2022, Mazda decided to get rid of assets in Russia, with the company transferring a stake in a joint venture in Vladivostok to Sollers JSC for 1 euro.[46]
Environmental efforts
Mazda has conducted research in hydrogen-powered vehicles for several decades.Mazda has developed a hybrid version of its Premacy compact minivan using a version of its signature rotary engine that can run on hydrogen or gasoline named the Mazda Premacy Hydrogen RE Hybrid. Despite plans to release it in 2008,[47][48] as of 2010 the vehicle is in limited trials.[49]
In 2010, Toyota and Mazda announced a supply agreement for the hybrid technology used in Toyota’s Prius model.[50]
Bio-car
Mazda is finding a host of alternative uses for a variety of materials and substances, ranging from plastic to milk, in its vehicles, as it aims to become more environmentally-friendly. Mazda introduced some of these innovations (bioplastic internal consoles and bio-fabric seats) in its Mazda5 model at EcoInnovasia 2008, at the Queen Sirikit National Convention Center in Bangkok. Up to 30% of the interior parts in the Mazda5 are made of non-biomaterial components, e.g. Poti (gobar of cows).[51]
SkyActiv technology
SkyActiv technology is an umbrella name for a range of technologies used in certain new Mazda vehicles. These vehicles include the Mazda2/Demio, Mazda3/Axela, Mazda6/Atenza, and CX-5. Together these technologies increase fuel economy to a level similar to a hybrid drivetrain. Engine output is increased and emission levels are reduced. These technologies include high compression ratio gasoline engines (13.0 to 1), reduced compression diesel engines (14.0 to 1) with new 2-stage turbocharger design, highly efficient automatic transmissions, lighter weight manual transmissions, lightweight body designs and electric power steering. It is also possible to combine these technologies with a hybrid drivetrain for even greater fuel economy.
Motorsport
In the racing world, Mazda has had substantial success with both its signature Wankel-engine cars (in two-rotor, three-rotor, and four-rotor forms) as well as its piston-engine models. Mazda vehicles and engines compete in a wide variety of disciplines and series around the world. In 1991, Mazda became the first Japanese automaker to win the 24 Hours of Le Mans overall.
International competition
Mazda’s competition debut was on October 20, 1968, when two Mazda Cosmo Sport 110S coupes entered the 84-hour Marathon de la Route ultra-endurance race at the Nürburgring, one finishing in fourth place and the other breaking an axle after 81 hours.[52] The next year, Mazda raced Mazda Familia R100 M10A coupes. After winning the Singapore Grand Prix in April 1969 and coming in fifth and sixth in the Spa 24 Hours (beaten only by Porsche 911s), on October 19, 1969, Mazda again entered the 84 hour Nürburgring race with four Familias. Only one of these finished, taking fifth place.
The first racing victory by a Wankel-engined car in the United States was in 1973, when Pat Bedard won an IMSA RS race at Lime Rock Park in a Mazda RX-2.[52]
In 1976, Ray Walle, owner of Z&W Mazda, drove a Cosmo (Mazda RX-5) from the dealership in Princeton, New Jersey, to Daytona, won the Touring Class Under 2.5 Liters at the 24 Hours of Daytona, and drove the car back to New Jersey. The Cosmo placed 18th overall in a field of 72. The only modifications were racing brake pads, exhaust, and safety equipment.[53]
After substantial successes by the Mazda RX-2 and Mazda RX-3, the Mazda RX-7 has won more IMSA races in its class than any other model of automobile, with its hundredth victory on September 2, 1990. Following that, the RX-7 won its class in the IMSA 24 Hours of Daytona race ten years in a row, starting in 1982. The RX-7 won the IMSA Grand Touring Under Two Liter (GTU) championship each year from 1980 through 1987, inclusive.
In 1991, a four-rotor Mazda 787B (2622 cc actual, rated by FIA formula at 4708 cc) won the 24 Hours of Le Mans auto race outright. The 787B’s triumph remains unparalleled, as it remains the only non-piston-engined car ever to win at Le Mans, and Mazda is the first Japanese marque to have won overall at Le Mans (though Nissan had closed down its World Sportscar Championship programme and Toyota had opted to take a sabbatical for most of 1991 in order to develop its 3.5-litre TS010[original research?]). This led to a ban on rotary engines in the Le Mans race starting in 1992, which has since been rescinded. After the 1991 race, the winning engine was publicly dismantled for internal examination, which demonstrated that despite 24 hours of extremely hard use it had accumulated very little wear.
The Le Mans win in 1991 followed a decade of class wins from other Mazda prototypes, including the 757 and 767. The Sigma MC74 powered by a Mazda 12A engine was the first engine and team from outside Western Europe or the United States to finish the entire 24 hours of the Le Mans race, in 1974. Mazda is also the most reliable finisher at Le Mans (with the exception of Honda, which has entered only three cars in only one year), with 67% of entries finishing. Mazda returned to prototype racing in 2005 with the introduction of the Courage C65 LMP2 car at the American Le Mans Series race at Road Atlanta. This prototype racer uses the Renesis Wankel from the RX-8.
Mazdas have also enjoyed substantial success in World Land Speed competition, SCCA competition, drag racing, pro rally competition (the Familia appeared in the WRC several times during the late ’80s and early ’90s), the One Lap of America race (winning SUV & truck in a MazdaSpeed5), and other venues. Wankel engines have been banned for some time from international Formula One racing,[citation needed] as well as from United States midget racing, after Gene Angelillo won the North East Midget Racing Association championship in 1985 with a car powered by a 13B engine, and again in 1986 in a car powered by a 12A engine.
Spec series
The Cooper Tires Atlantic Championship powered by Mazda is a North American open wheel racing series. It is the top level of the MAZDASPEED ladder, a driver development program which rewards season winners of one level with automatic rides at the next level. Since 2006, the Atlantic Championship has been run exclusively with Swift 016.a chassis powered by Mazda-Cosworth MZR 2300 cc (2.3L) DOHC inline-4 engines producing 300 bhp (224 kW). The cars are capable of speeds in excess of 175 mph (282 km/h).[54]
Formula Mazda features open wheel race cars with Mazda engines, adaptable to both oval tracks and road courses, on several levels of competition. Since 1991, the professionally organized Pro Mazda Championship has been the most popular format for sponsors, spectators, and upward bound drivers. It is the second-highest level on the aforementioned Mazdaspeed driver development ladder. Engines for the Star Mazda series are all built by one engine builder, certified to produce the prescribed power, and sealed to discourage tampering. They are in a relatively mild state of racing tune, so that they are extremely reliable and can go years between motor rebuilds.
Spec Miata has become one of the most popular and most affordable road racing classes in North America. The Spec Miata (SM) class is intended to provide the opportunity to compete in low-cost, production-based cars with limited modifications, suitable for racing competition. The rules are intentionally designed to be more open than the Showroom Stock class but more restricted than the Improved Touring class.
Spec RX-7 is also a popular club racing class primarily due to the availability of first-generation RX7 cars and the low startup cost.[citation needed]
Mazda’s headquarters in Fuchū, Hiroshima
Mazda is a major sponsor to several professional sports teams, including:
- Hometown teams:
- Sanfrecce Hiroshima (J. League): Originally known as Toyo Kogyo Soccer Club and founded in 1938, it was owned directly by Mazda until 1992 when Mazda reduced its share to professionalize the club for the new J. League.
- Hiroshima Toyo Carp (Nippon Professional Baseball): The «Toyo» part of the team’s name is in honor of Mazda’s part-ownership of the team since 1968 (when Mazda was still known as Toyo Kogyo). The Matsuda family, descended from the founder of Mazda, holds the majority share in team ownership.
- Teams abroad:
- North Melbourne Football Club (Australian Football League)
- ACF Fiorentina (Serie A)
- Nakhon Ratchasima (Thai League 1)
The company also sponsors various marathon and relay race events in Japan, such as the Hiroshima International Peace Marathon and the Hiroshima Prefectural Ekiden Race, along with numerous other sporting and charity endeavors in Hiroshima and Hofu.[55] Mazda was also the league sponsor for the now-defunct Australian Rugby Championship.
Mazda maintained sponsorship of the Laguna Seca racing course in California from 2001 until February 2018,[56] going so far as to use it for its own automotive testing purposes as well as the numerous racing events (including several Mazda-specific series) that it used to host, as well as for the 2003 launch of the Mazda RX-8.[57] Since April 2018, the venue’s primary corporate sponsor is WeatherTech.
Mazda also sponsors the Western New York Flash, a professional women’s soccer team that plays in the WPA and has some of the best players in the world, including world player of the year.[58]
Mazda has been a sponsor of Club Deportivo Universidad Católica’s basketball team of the Liga Nacional de Básquetbol de Chile.[59]
Marketing
Mazda’s past advertising slogans included: «The more you look, the more you like» (1970s to early 1980s); «Experience Mazda» (mid-1980s); «An intense commitment to your total satisfaction, that’s The Mazda Way» (late 1980s); «It Just Feels Right» along with advertising describing Mazda’s use of Kansei engineering (1990–1995); «Passion for the road» (1996); «Get in. Be moved.» (1997–2000). Another marketing slogan was «Sakes Alive!», for its truck line.
Since 2000, Mazda has used the phrase «Zoom-Zoom» to describe what it calls the «emotion of motion» that it claims is inherent in its cars.[60] Extremely successful and long-lasting (when compared to other automotive marketing taglines), the Zoom-Zoom campaign has now spread around the world from its initial use in North America.[61]
The Zoom-Zoom campaign has been accompanied by the «Zoom-Zoom-Zoom» song in many television and radio advertisements. The original version, performed by Jibril Serapis Bey (used in commercials in Europe, Japan and South Africa), was recorded long before it became the official song for Mazda as part of a soundtrack to the movie Only The Strong (released in 1993). The Serapis Bey version is a cover of a traditional Capoeira song, called «Capoeira Mata Um». In 2010, its current slogan is «Zoom Zoom Forever». The longer slogan (Used in TV ads) is «Zoom Zoom, Today, Tomorrow, Forever».
Early ads in the Zoom-Zoom campaign also featured a young boy (Micah Kanters) whispering the «Zoom-Zoom» tagline.[62]
Since 2011, Mazda has still used the Zoom-Zoom tagline in another campaign called «What Do You Drive?». The punchline for this is «At Mazda, we believe because if it’s not worth driving, it’s not worth building. We build Mazdas. What do you drive?».
In 2015, Mazda had launched a new campaign under a new tagline, «Driving Matters», coinciding with the release of the redesigned MX-5.[63] This campaign was meant to solidify Mazda’s «Zoom Zoom» slogan. A 60-second long advertisement titled «A Driver’s Life», coincided with the new tagline on the following week.
See also
- List of Mazda engines
- List of Mazda facilities
- List of Mazda model codes
- List of Mazda vehicles
References
- ^ a b c «Consolidated Financial Results» (PDF). mazda.com/investors. Retrieved June 21, 2011.
- ^ Tajitsu, Naomi (August 4, 2017). «Toyota takes stake in Mazda, links up for $1.6 billion U.S. plant». Reuters. Retrieved December 14, 2019.
- ^ «Offices Archived October 7, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.» Mazda. Retrieved on October 29, 2009.
- ^ «MAZDA:Mazda Production and Sales Results for December 2007 and for January through December 2007 (Flash Report) | Production and Salese Results». Archived from the original on April 18, 2008. Retrieved July 31, 2016.
- ^ «World motor vehicle production OICA correspondents survey without double counts world ranking of manufacturers year 2015» (PDF).
- ^ Corporate Financing and Governance in Japan: The Road to the Future, page 153, By Takeo Hoshi, Anil Kashyap
- ^ «GREAT CARS OF MAZDA». Retrieved October 8, 2017.
- ^ «A Story Behind the Name of ‘Mazda’«. Retrieved April 11, 2022.
- ^ «MAZDA: Mazda-Go 3-wheeled trucks». www.mazda.com. Retrieved April 16, 2019.
- ^ The Globe: In Search of the Origins of Mazda, Mazda Motor Corporation, January 30, 1990, p. 73
- ^ «A Story Behind the Name of «Mazda»«. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
- ^ «Development of domestic 5-channel system and management crisis [Mazda 100-year history, 25th, Chapter 7 Part 3]». Cliccar.com. Cliccar. July 25, 2020. Retrieved November 11, 2021.
- ^ Asian Firms: History, Institutions and Management, page 24, By Frank B. Tipton
- ^ Corporate Financing and Governance in Japan: The Road to the Future, page 153 By Takeo Hoshi, Anil Kashyap
- ^ Asian Firms: History, Institutions and Management, page 24, By Frank B. Tipton
- ^ Doner, Richard F. (1991), Driving a Bargain: Automobile Industrialization and Japanese Firms in Southeast Asia, Berkeley, Los Angeles, and Oxford: University of California, p. 294, ISBN 0-520-06938-2
- ^ Between MITI and the Market: Japanese Industrial Policy for High Technology, page 139 By Daniel I. Okimoto
- ^ «Mazda Annual Report 2017» (PDF). Mazda Motor Corporation. p. 59. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 21, 2018. Retrieved January 20, 2018.
- ^ Stock and Bond Information, Mazda, March 31, 2014
- ^ a b Mazda Annual Report 1980, Hiroshima, Japan: Toyo Kogyo Co., Ltd., March 1981, p. 3
- ^ «Family tree bears fruit», Christopher de Fraga,The Age, 1 June 1984, page 18
- ^ «Telstar should keep Ford on top», Christopher de Fraga,The Age, June 14, 1983, page 18
- ^ «Ford, Mazda Zoom Apart». CAR. South Africa. September 1, 2002.
- ^ Australia Welcomes The ‘new’ Migrants, The Age, June 16, 1986, page 43
- ^ «Mazda Has Used Four Different Logos Since the 1980s». Retrieved January 30, 2019.
- ^ «The Evolution of the Mazda Logo and Brand». Inside Mazda. April 21, 2016. Retrieved January 26, 2022.
- ^ Ramey, Jay (March 15, 2018). «Rare anywhere: Mazda Navajo». Auto Week. US. Retrieved October 20, 2022.
- ^ «Mazda Kills B-Series Pickup». Automobile Magazine. September 16, 2009. Archived from the original on June 30, 2010. Retrieved June 28, 2010.
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ^ Rowley, Ian (October 11, 2008). «Ford to Sell Mazda?». Business Week. Archived from the original on October 14, 2008. Retrieved October 12, 2008.
- ^ «Ford to Sell 20% of stake in Mazda » Stuff going on in the world». Miscstuff.wordpress.com. November 18, 2008. Retrieved May 7, 2009.
- ^ Henry, Jim (November 24, 2008). «Ford Sells Controlling Stake in Mazda». CBS News. Retrieved July 3, 2016.
- ^ Chang-Ran Kim (November 18, 2008). «Ford abandons Mazda control with 20 percent stake sale». Reuters. Archived from the original on October 16, 2015. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
- ^ «Ford, Trying to Raise Cash, Sells Stake in Mazda». New York Times. November 18, 2008.
- ^ «Ford to Change Stake in Mazda». Ford Motor Company. November 18, 2010. Archived from the original on July 11, 2011. Retrieved March 9, 2011.
- ^ Taniguchi, Takako (October 18, 2010). «Sumitomo Mitsui To Overtake Ford as Mazda’s Top Shareholder, Chairman Says». Bloomberg. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
- ^ «Ford sells remaining stake in Mazda». Nikkei. November 13, 2015. Retrieved February 18, 2017.
- ^ Mukai, Anna; Hagiwara, Yuki (March 5, 2012). «Mazda’s Record Share Sale to Help Boost Capital After Losses». bloomberg.com. Retrieved September 3, 2015.
- ^ «UPDATE 1-Mazda, Sumitomo to build Mexico car plant -Nikkei». Reuters. November 30, 2010. Archived from the original on November 17, 2015. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
- ^ «Toyota, Mazda form partnership to share technologies, confront cost challenges». Automotive News. May 13, 2015. Retrieved April 17, 2016.
- ^ «It Was Japan’s Most Daring Car. Then the Economy Imploded». Jalopnik. December 20, 2018. Retrieved December 17, 2021.
- ^ «2021 (Full Year) Global: Mazda Worldwide Car Sales, Production, and Exports». January 31, 2022. Retrieved December 26, 2022.
- ^ Cain, Timothy (May 15, 2017). «Mazda Wants 2 Percent U.S. Market Share, But Not Just Any Ol’ 2 Percent Market Share (15 May 2017)». The Truth about Cars. Retrieved May 30, 2017.
- ^ Wayland, Michael (May 15, 2017). «Mazda’s 2% solution». Automotive News. Retrieved May 30, 2017.
- ^ «Mazda окончательно уходит из России». www.gazeta.ru. November 10, 2022.
- ^ Alan Ohnsman (October 27, 2007). «Nissan, Honda Seek Edge With Low-Emission Cars at Tokyo Show». Bloomberg. Retrieved March 29, 2010.
- ^ Chas Hallet (August 28, 2008). «Mazda plans Volt rival». Autocar. Retrieved May 7, 2009.
- ^ «Mazda Delivers Premacy Hydrogen RE Hybrid to Iwatani Corporation for use in Kyushu» (Press release). Mazda. January 13, 2010. Retrieved March 29, 2010.
- ^ «TMC and Mazda Agree to Hybrid System Technology License» (PDF) (Press release). Toyota & Mazda. March 29, 2010. Retrieved March 29, 2010.
- ^ «Bioplastic, Research, Environmentally | Fabric and consoles in Mazda». bioplastics24.com. May 1, 2006. Archived from the original on December 3, 2008. Retrieved May 7, 2009.
- ^ a b «The Rotary Club», Don Sherman, Automobile Magazine, February 2008, pp 76–79
- ^ «daytona rx5». Mazdarx5.com. Archived from the original on July 14, 2011. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
- ^ «Champ Car Atlantic News». Champcaratlantic.com. Retrieved September 29, 2010.[permanent dead link]
- ^ MAZDA:Basic Idea on Community and Social Contributions | With Communities and Society Archived September 17, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Brown, Maury. «After 17 Years, Mazda Dropping Naming Rights To Laguna Seca Raceway». Forbes. Retrieved August 9, 2022.
- ^ «Track Sponsors». Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca. Archived from the original on December 31, 2004.
- ^ Marta Vieira da Silva
- ^ Universidad Católica presento cinco refuerzos para la Liga Nacional de Básquetbol 2016-2017 El Deportero, 30 September 2016. Accessed 8 April 2020. (in Spanish)
- ^ «Mazda Challenges Consumers in Zoom-Zoom Contest». Archived from the original on April 22, 2008. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
- ^ «What’s Zoom Zoom ? | Mazda Spirit». MAZDA. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
- ^ «Interview with Micah Kanters». Shufflingdead.com. September 10, 2004. Archived from the original on May 28, 2010. Retrieved June 28, 2010.
- ^ Nelson, Gabe (May 21, 2015). «Mazda’s new mantra: ‘Driving Matters’«. Automotive News. Retrieved July 22, 2015.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mazda.
- Official website
Coordinates: 34°22′37″N 132°30′03″E / 34.3770577°N 132.5008222°E
Headquarters in Fuchū, Japan (2020) |
|
Native name |
マツダ株式会社 |
---|---|
Romanized name |
Matsuda Kabushiki-Gaisha |
Type | Public (K.K.) |
Traded as |
TYO: 7261 |
Industry | Automotive |
Founded | 30 January 1920; 102 years ago |
Founder | Jujiro Matsuda |
Headquarters | 3-1 Shinchi, Fuchū, Hiroshima, Japan |
Area served |
Worldwide |
Key people |
Kiyotaka Shobuda (Chairman) Akira Marumoto (President and CEO) |
Products | Motor vehicles, engines (1,202,489 units, 2016) |
Revenue | ¥3.4 trillion (FY 2016)[1] |
Operating income |
¥22.6 billion (FY 2016)[1] |
Net income |
¥13.4 billion (FY 2016)[1] |
Owners | Japan Trustee Services Bank (6.3%) Toyota Motor Corporation (5%)[2] The Master Trust Bank of Japan (4.7%) Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (2.2%) |
Number of employees |
46,398 (2016) |
Website | www.mazda.com |
Mazda Motor Corporation (Japanese: マツダ株式会社, Hepburn: Matsuda Kabushiki-Gaisha), commonly referred to as simply Mazda, is a Japanese multinational automotive manufacturer headquartered in Fuchū, Hiroshima, Japan.[4]
In 2015, Mazda produced 1.5 million vehicles for global sales, the majority of which (nearly one million) were produced in the company’s Japanese plants, with the remainder coming from a variety of other plants worldwide.[5] During this time, Mazda was the 15th-largest automaker in terms of production globally.[6]
History
Creation
The first registered corporate logo, which appeared on three-wheel trucks in 1936.
The first stylized branding. The three mountains (representing Hiroshima) also form the Latin alphabet letter M, which is duplicated three times for «Mazda Motor Manufacturer». The long side extensions represent wings for agility and speed.
Mazda began as the Toyo Cork Kogyo Co., Ltd, as a cork-making factory founded in Hiroshima, Japan, 30 January 1920. Toyo Cork Kogyo renamed itself to Toyo Kogyo Co., Ltd. in 1927. In the late 1920s the company had to be saved from bankruptcy by Hiroshima Saving Bank and other business leaders in Hiroshima.[7]
In 1931, Toyo Kogyo moved from manufacturing machine tools to vehicles with the introduction of the Mazda-Go auto rickshaw. The name Mazda came into existence with the production of the company’s first three-wheeled trucks. Other candidates for a model name included Sumera-Go, Tenshi-Go, and more.[8]
Officially, the company states:
Mazda comes from Ahura Mazda, the god of harmony, intelligence and wisdom from the earliest civilization in West Asia. Key members of Toyo Kogyo interpreted Mazda as a symbol of the beginning of the East and the West civilization, but also a symbol of the automotive civilization and culture.»[9]
The company’s website further notes that the name also derives from the name of the company’s founder, Jujiro Matsuda.[10] The alternative proposed names mean «god» (Sumera) and «angel» (Tenshi); both indicate Matsuda’s strong interest in human faith.[11]
The Mazda lettering was used in combination with the corporate emblem of Mitsubishi Motors, which was responsible for sales, to produce the Toyo Kogyo three-wheeled truck registered trademark.[12]
Toyo Kogyo produced weapons for the Japanese military throughout the Second World War, most notably the series 30 through 35 Type 99 rifle. The company formally adopted the Mazda name in 1984, though every automobile sold from the beginning bore that name. The Mazda R360 was introduced in 1960, followed by the Mazda Carol in 1962 and were sold at a specific retail dealership that sold passenger cars called «Mazda Auto Store» whereas commercial products were sold at «Mazda Store». As Mazda continued to offer passenger cars like the Savanna, Familia, Luce, Cosmo and Capella, they were added to the «Mazda Auto Store» network only.[13]
Wankel engine adoption
Symbol and corporate mark as seen on most Mazda cars from the Mazda R360 until 1975
Beginning in the 1960s, Mazda was inspired by the NSU Ro 80 and decided to put a major engineering effort into development of the Wankel rotary engine as a way of differentiating itself from other Japanese auto companies. The company formed a business relationship with German company NSU and began with the limited-production Cosmo Sport of 1967, and continuing to the present day with the Pro Mazda Championship, Mazda has become the sole manufacturer of Wankel-type engines for the automotive market, mainly by way of attrition. (NSU and Citroën both gave up on the design during the 1970s, and prototype Corvette efforts by General Motors never made it to production.)
This effort to bring attention to itself apparently helped, as Mazda rapidly began to export its vehicles. Both piston-powered and rotary-powered models made their way around the world. The rotary models quickly became popular for their combination of good power and light weight when compared to piston-engined competitors that required heavier V6 or V8 engines to produce the same power. The R100 and the RX series (RX-2, RX-3, and RX-4) led the company’s export efforts.
During 1968, Mazda started formal operations in Canada (MazdaCanada) although Mazdas were seen in Canada as early as 1959. In 1970, Mazda formally entered the American market (Mazda North American Operations) and was very successful there, going so far as to create the Mazda Rotary Pickup (based on the conventional piston-powered B-Series model) solely for North American buyers. To this day, Mazda remains the only automaker to have produced a Wankel-powered pickup truck. Additionally, it is also the only marque to have ever offered a rotary-powered bus (the Mazda Parkway, offered only in Japan) or station wagon (within the RX-3 and RX-4 lines for certain markets). After nine years of development, Mazda finally launched its new model in the U.S. in 1970.[14]
Mazda’s rotary success continued until the onset of the 1973 oil crisis. As American buyers (as well as those in other nations) quickly turned to vehicles with better fuel efficiency, the relatively thirsty rotary-powered models began to fall out of favor. Combined with being the least-efficient automaker in Japan (in terms of productivity), inability to adjust to excess inventory and over-reliance on the U.S. market, the company suffered a huge loss in 1975.[15][16] An already heavily indebted Toyo Kogyo was on the verge of bankruptcy and was only saved through the intervention of Sumitomo keiretsu group, namely Sumitomo Bank, and the company’s subcontractors and distributors.[17][18] However, the company had not totally turned its back on piston engines, as it continued to produce a variety of four-cylinder models throughout the 1970s. The smaller Familia line in particular became very important to Mazda’s worldwide sales after 1973, as did the somewhat larger Capella series.
Mazda RX-7 (first generation)
Mazda refocused its efforts and made the rotary engine a choice for the sporting motorist rather than a mainstream powerplant. Starting with the lightweight RX-7 in 1978 and continuing with the modern RX-8, Mazda has continued its dedication to this unique powerplant. This switch in focus also resulted in the development of another lightweight sports car, the piston-powered Mazda MX-5 Miata (sold as the Eunos and later Mazda Roadster in Japan), inspired by the concept ‘jinba ittai’. Introduced in 1989 to worldwide acclaim, the Roadster has been widely credited with reviving the concept of the small sports car after its decline in the late 1970s.
Partnership with Ford
From 1974 to 2015, Mazda had a partnership with the Ford Motor Company, which acquired a 24.5% stake in 1979, upped to a 33.4% ownership of Mazda in May 1995.[19] Under the administration of Alan Mulally, Ford gradually divested its stake in Mazda from 2008 to 2015, with Ford holding 2.1% of Mazda stock as of 2014[20] and severing most production as well as development ties.
This partnership with Ford began owing to Mazda’s financial difficulties during the 1960s. Starting in 1979 by expanding their 7 percent financial stake to 24.5%, Ford expanded an existing partnership with Mazda, resulting in various joint projects. The cooperation had begun in 1971 when the Mazda B-Series spawned a Ford Courier variant for North America, a version which was later offered in other markets as well. Mazda’s Bongo and Titan cab-over trucks were sold with Ford badging in mainly Asia and the Pacific region beginning in 1976.[21] These included large and small efforts in all areas of the automotive landscape, most notably in the realm of pickup trucks and smaller cars. Mazda began supplying manual transaxles to Ford in the spring of 1980.[21] Mazda’s Familia platform was used for Ford models like the Laser and Escort beginning in 1980, while the Capella architecture found its way into Ford’s Telstar sedan and Probe sports models.
During the 1980s, Ford-badged Mazda products replaced much of their own European-sourced lineup, especially in the Asia-Pacific markets, with the Laser replacing the Escort[22] and the Telstar replacing the Cortina.[23] In some cases, such as New Zealand and South Africa, these were assembled alongside their Mazda-badged equivalents, the Mazda 323 (Familia) and 626 (Capella).
Following the closure of its own assembly plant in New Zealand, Mazda established a joint venture with Ford New Zealand known as Vehicle Assemblers of New Zealand (VANZ), while in South Africa, Ford’s local subsidiary merged with Sigma Motor Corporation, which already assembled Mazdas in the country, to form Samcor, although the sharing of models proved unpopular with both Ford and Mazda customers.[24] In other markets such as Australia, however, the 323 and 626 were always fully imported, with only the Laser and Telstar assembled locally.[25] In Japan, the Laser and Telstar were also sold alongside their Mazda-badged brethren, but the Festiva was not sold as a Mazda 121 on the Japanese market.
In North America, the Probe was built in a new Mazda company plant in Flat Rock, Michigan, along with the mainstream 626 sedan and a companion Mazda MX-6 sports coupe. Ford also lent Mazda some of its capacity when needed: the Mazda 121 sold in Europe and South Africa was, for a time, a variant of the Ford Fiesta built in plants in Europe and South Africa. Mazda also made an effort in the past to sell some of Ford’s cars in Japan, mainly through its Autorama dealer group.
In 1991, Mazda adopted a corporate symbol which was to represent a sun and a flame standing for heartfelt passion. This is commonly referred to in Mazda enthusiast circles as the «cylon» logo.[26]
Shortly after the release of the new symbol, the design was smoothed out to reduce its similarity to Renault’s. This is sometimes referred to as the «eternal flame» logo. It also represented the design of the rotary engine that Mazda was famous for.
The brand symbol, adopted in 1997, with the V-shape wings inside, standing for “growth” and “improvement” and Mazda logo in Mazda blue.[27] A slightly modified version was introduced in 2015.
Mazda also helped Ford develop the 1991 Explorer, which Mazda sold as the 2-door only Mazda Navajo from 1991 through 1994. However, Mazda’s version was unsuccessful, while the Ford (available from the start as a 4-door or 2-door model) instantly became the best-selling sport-utility vehicle in the United States and kept that title for over a decade.[28] Mazda has used Ford’s Ranger pickup as the basis for its North American–market B-Series trucks, starting in 1994 and continuing through 2010, when Mazda discontinued importing its B-Series trucks to North America, due to costs associated with the chicken tax.[29]
Following its long-held fascination with alternative engine technology, Mazda introduced the first Miller cycle engine for automotive use in the Millenia luxury sedan of 1995. Though the Millenia (and its Miller-type V6 engine) were discontinued in 2002, the company has recently introduced a much smaller Miller-cycle four-cylinder engine for use in its Demio starting in 2008. As with its leadership in Wankel technology, Mazda remains (so far) the only automaker to have used a Miller-cycle engine in the automotive realm.
Further financial difficulties at Mazda during the 1990s (partly caused by losses related to the 1997 Asian financial crisis[citation needed]) caused Ford to increase its stake to a 33.4-percent controlling interest in May 1996. In June 1996, Henry Wallace was appointed president, and he set about restructuring Mazda and setting it on a new strategic direction. He laid out a new direction for the brand including the design of the present Mazda marque; he laid out a new product plan to achieve synergies with Ford, and he launched Mazda’s digital innovation program to speed up the development of new products. At the same time, he started taking control of overseas distributors, rationalized dealerships and manufacturing facilities, and driving much-needed efficiencies and cost reductions in Mazda’s operations. Much of his early work put Mazda back into profitability and laid the foundations for future success. Wallace was succeeded by James Miller in November 1997, followed in December 1999 by Ford executive Mark Fields, who has been credited with expanding Mazda’s new product lineup and leading the turnaround during the early 2000s. Ford’s increased influence during the 1990s allowed Mazda to claim another distinction in history, having maintained the first foreign-born head of a Japanese car company, Henry Wallace.
Divestment by Ford
Amid the world financial crisis in the fall of 2008, reports emerged that Ford was contemplating a sale of its stake in Mazda as a way of streamlining its asset base.[30] BusinessWeek explained the alliance between Ford and Mazda has been a very successful one, with Mazda saving perhaps $90 million a year in development costs and Ford «several times» that, and that a sale of its stake in Mazda would be a desperate measure.[31] On November 18, 2008, Ford announced that it would sell a 20% stake in Mazda, reducing its stake to 13.4%, thus surrendering control of the company, which it held since 1996.[32][33] The following day, Mazda announced that, as part of the deal, it was buying back 6.8% of its shares from Ford for about US$185 million while the rest would be acquired by business partners of the company.[34] It was also reported that Hisakazu Imaki would be stepping down as chief executive, to be replaced by Takashi Yamanouchi.[35] On November 18, 2010, Ford reduced its stake further to 3%, citing the reduction of ownership would allow greater flexibility to pursue growth in emerging markets, and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group was believed to become its largest shareholder. Ford and Mazda remained strategic partners through joint ventures and exchanges of technological information.[36][37]
Mazda’s first mass-produced electric car, the MX-30
On September 30, 2015, when Ford’s shares had sunk to a little over 2% due to stock dilution, Ford sold its remaining shares in Mazda.[38]
Post-Ford efforts
In 2011, Mazda raised more than 150 billion yen (US$1.9 billion) in a record share sale to replenish capital, as it suffered its biggest annual loss in 11 years. Part of the proceeds were used to build an auto plant in Salamanca, Mexico.[39] The Mexican plant was built jointly by the company and Sumitomo Corporation.[40]
In May 2015, the company signed an agreement with Toyota to form a «long-term partnership», that would, among others, see Mazda supply Toyota with fuel-efficient SkyActiv gasoline and diesel engine technology in exchange for hydrogen fuel cell systems.[41]
Marques
Mazda tried using a number of different marques in the Japanese (and occasionally Australian) markets in the 1990s, including Autozam, Eunos, and ɛ̃fini. The motivation was brought on by market competition from other Japanese automakers efforts in offering vehicles at multiple Japanese dealership networks offered by Toyota, Nissan, and Honda. Mazda’s implementation of brand diversification reflected a Japanese engineering philosophy, called Kansei engineering, which was used as an advertising slogan in North America.
One of the oddest sub-marques was M2, used on three rare variants of the Eunos Roadster (the M2-1001, M2-1002 and M2-1028) and one of the Autozam AZ-1 (M2-1015). M2 even had its own avant-garde company headquarters, but was shut down after a very short period of operation.
In early 1992, Mazda planned to release a luxury marque, Amati, to challenge Acura, Infiniti, and Lexus in North America, which was to begin selling in late 1993. The initial Amati range would have included the Amati 500 (which became the Eunos 800 in Japan and Australia, Mazda Millenia in the U.S., and Mazda Xedos 9 in Europe), a rebadged version of the Mazda Cosmo and the Amati 1000 (a rear-wheel drive V12 competitor to the Lexus LS400[42]). The Amati marque was eventually scrapped before any cars hit the market. It is perhaps just a curiosity, but «Amati» happens to be an anagram of «Miata».
In Europe, the Xedos name was also associated with the Mazda Xedos 6, the two models were in production from 1992 until 1997. The Xedos line was marketed under the Mazda marque, and used the Mazda badge from the corresponding years.
This diversification stressed the product development groups at Mazda past its limits. Instead of having a half-dozen variations on any given platform, developers were asked to work on dozens of different models at the same time. Consumers were confused as well by the explosion of similar new models. This selective marketing experiment was ended in the mid-1990s due to economic conditions, largely attributed to the collapse of the Japanese asset price bubble in 1991.
Leadership
- Jujiro Matsuda (1920–1951)
- Tsuneji Matsuda (1952–1970)
- Kouhei Matsuda (1970–1977)
- Yoshiki Yamasaki (1977–1984)
- Kenichi Yamamoto (1984–1987)
- Masanori Furuta (1987–1991)
- Yoshihiro Wada (1991–1996)
- Henry Wallace (1996–1997, appointed by Ford Motor Company, first non-Japanese CEO of a Japanese automaker)
- James E. Miller (1997–1999)
- Mark Fields (1999–2002)
- Lewis Booth (2002–2003)
- Hisakazu Imaki (2003–2008)
- Takashi Yamanouchi (2008–2013)
- Masamichi Kogai (2013–present)
Markets
As of January 2022, the United States is Mazda’s biggest market, followed by China and Japan.[43] Mazda’s market share in the U.S. fell to a 10-year low of 1.7 percent in 2016.[44] Mazda’s brand loyalty was 39 percent in 2016, below the industry average of 53 percent.[45] On October 24, 2022, Mazda decided to get rid of assets in Russia, with the company transferring a stake in a joint venture in Vladivostok to Sollers JSC for 1 euro.[46]
Environmental efforts
Mazda has conducted research in hydrogen-powered vehicles for several decades.Mazda has developed a hybrid version of its Premacy compact minivan using a version of its signature rotary engine that can run on hydrogen or gasoline named the Mazda Premacy Hydrogen RE Hybrid. Despite plans to release it in 2008,[47][48] as of 2010 the vehicle is in limited trials.[49]
In 2010, Toyota and Mazda announced a supply agreement for the hybrid technology used in Toyota’s Prius model.[50]
Bio-car
Mazda is finding a host of alternative uses for a variety of materials and substances, ranging from plastic to milk, in its vehicles, as it aims to become more environmentally-friendly. Mazda introduced some of these innovations (bioplastic internal consoles and bio-fabric seats) in its Mazda5 model at EcoInnovasia 2008, at the Queen Sirikit National Convention Center in Bangkok. Up to 30% of the interior parts in the Mazda5 are made of non-biomaterial components, e.g. Poti (gobar of cows).[51]
SkyActiv technology
SkyActiv technology is an umbrella name for a range of technologies used in certain new Mazda vehicles. These vehicles include the Mazda2/Demio, Mazda3/Axela, Mazda6/Atenza, and CX-5. Together these technologies increase fuel economy to a level similar to a hybrid drivetrain. Engine output is increased and emission levels are reduced. These technologies include high compression ratio gasoline engines (13.0 to 1), reduced compression diesel engines (14.0 to 1) with new 2-stage turbocharger design, highly efficient automatic transmissions, lighter weight manual transmissions, lightweight body designs and electric power steering. It is also possible to combine these technologies with a hybrid drivetrain for even greater fuel economy.
Motorsport
In the racing world, Mazda has had substantial success with both its signature Wankel-engine cars (in two-rotor, three-rotor, and four-rotor forms) as well as its piston-engine models. Mazda vehicles and engines compete in a wide variety of disciplines and series around the world. In 1991, Mazda became the first Japanese automaker to win the 24 Hours of Le Mans overall.
International competition
Mazda’s competition debut was on October 20, 1968, when two Mazda Cosmo Sport 110S coupes entered the 84-hour Marathon de la Route ultra-endurance race at the Nürburgring, one finishing in fourth place and the other breaking an axle after 81 hours.[52] The next year, Mazda raced Mazda Familia R100 M10A coupes. After winning the Singapore Grand Prix in April 1969 and coming in fifth and sixth in the Spa 24 Hours (beaten only by Porsche 911s), on October 19, 1969, Mazda again entered the 84 hour Nürburgring race with four Familias. Only one of these finished, taking fifth place.
The first racing victory by a Wankel-engined car in the United States was in 1973, when Pat Bedard won an IMSA RS race at Lime Rock Park in a Mazda RX-2.[52]
In 1976, Ray Walle, owner of Z&W Mazda, drove a Cosmo (Mazda RX-5) from the dealership in Princeton, New Jersey, to Daytona, won the Touring Class Under 2.5 Liters at the 24 Hours of Daytona, and drove the car back to New Jersey. The Cosmo placed 18th overall in a field of 72. The only modifications were racing brake pads, exhaust, and safety equipment.[53]
After substantial successes by the Mazda RX-2 and Mazda RX-3, the Mazda RX-7 has won more IMSA races in its class than any other model of automobile, with its hundredth victory on September 2, 1990. Following that, the RX-7 won its class in the IMSA 24 Hours of Daytona race ten years in a row, starting in 1982. The RX-7 won the IMSA Grand Touring Under Two Liter (GTU) championship each year from 1980 through 1987, inclusive.
In 1991, a four-rotor Mazda 787B (2622 cc actual, rated by FIA formula at 4708 cc) won the 24 Hours of Le Mans auto race outright. The 787B’s triumph remains unparalleled, as it remains the only non-piston-engined car ever to win at Le Mans, and Mazda is the first Japanese marque to have won overall at Le Mans (though Nissan had closed down its World Sportscar Championship programme and Toyota had opted to take a sabbatical for most of 1991 in order to develop its 3.5-litre TS010[original research?]). This led to a ban on rotary engines in the Le Mans race starting in 1992, which has since been rescinded. After the 1991 race, the winning engine was publicly dismantled for internal examination, which demonstrated that despite 24 hours of extremely hard use it had accumulated very little wear.
The Le Mans win in 1991 followed a decade of class wins from other Mazda prototypes, including the 757 and 767. The Sigma MC74 powered by a Mazda 12A engine was the first engine and team from outside Western Europe or the United States to finish the entire 24 hours of the Le Mans race, in 1974. Mazda is also the most reliable finisher at Le Mans (with the exception of Honda, which has entered only three cars in only one year), with 67% of entries finishing. Mazda returned to prototype racing in 2005 with the introduction of the Courage C65 LMP2 car at the American Le Mans Series race at Road Atlanta. This prototype racer uses the Renesis Wankel from the RX-8.
Mazdas have also enjoyed substantial success in World Land Speed competition, SCCA competition, drag racing, pro rally competition (the Familia appeared in the WRC several times during the late ’80s and early ’90s), the One Lap of America race (winning SUV & truck in a MazdaSpeed5), and other venues. Wankel engines have been banned for some time from international Formula One racing,[citation needed] as well as from United States midget racing, after Gene Angelillo won the North East Midget Racing Association championship in 1985 with a car powered by a 13B engine, and again in 1986 in a car powered by a 12A engine.
Spec series
The Cooper Tires Atlantic Championship powered by Mazda is a North American open wheel racing series. It is the top level of the MAZDASPEED ladder, a driver development program which rewards season winners of one level with automatic rides at the next level. Since 2006, the Atlantic Championship has been run exclusively with Swift 016.a chassis powered by Mazda-Cosworth MZR 2300 cc (2.3L) DOHC inline-4 engines producing 300 bhp (224 kW). The cars are capable of speeds in excess of 175 mph (282 km/h).[54]
Formula Mazda features open wheel race cars with Mazda engines, adaptable to both oval tracks and road courses, on several levels of competition. Since 1991, the professionally organized Pro Mazda Championship has been the most popular format for sponsors, spectators, and upward bound drivers. It is the second-highest level on the aforementioned Mazdaspeed driver development ladder. Engines for the Star Mazda series are all built by one engine builder, certified to produce the prescribed power, and sealed to discourage tampering. They are in a relatively mild state of racing tune, so that they are extremely reliable and can go years between motor rebuilds.
Spec Miata has become one of the most popular and most affordable road racing classes in North America. The Spec Miata (SM) class is intended to provide the opportunity to compete in low-cost, production-based cars with limited modifications, suitable for racing competition. The rules are intentionally designed to be more open than the Showroom Stock class but more restricted than the Improved Touring class.
Spec RX-7 is also a popular club racing class primarily due to the availability of first-generation RX7 cars and the low startup cost.[citation needed]
Mazda’s headquarters in Fuchū, Hiroshima
Mazda is a major sponsor to several professional sports teams, including:
- Hometown teams:
- Sanfrecce Hiroshima (J. League): Originally known as Toyo Kogyo Soccer Club and founded in 1938, it was owned directly by Mazda until 1992 when Mazda reduced its share to professionalize the club for the new J. League.
- Hiroshima Toyo Carp (Nippon Professional Baseball): The «Toyo» part of the team’s name is in honor of Mazda’s part-ownership of the team since 1968 (when Mazda was still known as Toyo Kogyo). The Matsuda family, descended from the founder of Mazda, holds the majority share in team ownership.
- Teams abroad:
- North Melbourne Football Club (Australian Football League)
- ACF Fiorentina (Serie A)
- Nakhon Ratchasima (Thai League 1)
The company also sponsors various marathon and relay race events in Japan, such as the Hiroshima International Peace Marathon and the Hiroshima Prefectural Ekiden Race, along with numerous other sporting and charity endeavors in Hiroshima and Hofu.[55] Mazda was also the league sponsor for the now-defunct Australian Rugby Championship.
Mazda maintained sponsorship of the Laguna Seca racing course in California from 2001 until February 2018,[56] going so far as to use it for its own automotive testing purposes as well as the numerous racing events (including several Mazda-specific series) that it used to host, as well as for the 2003 launch of the Mazda RX-8.[57] Since April 2018, the venue’s primary corporate sponsor is WeatherTech.
Mazda also sponsors the Western New York Flash, a professional women’s soccer team that plays in the WPA and has some of the best players in the world, including world player of the year.[58]
Mazda has been a sponsor of Club Deportivo Universidad Católica’s basketball team of the Liga Nacional de Básquetbol de Chile.[59]
Marketing
Mazda’s past advertising slogans included: «The more you look, the more you like» (1970s to early 1980s); «Experience Mazda» (mid-1980s); «An intense commitment to your total satisfaction, that’s The Mazda Way» (late 1980s); «It Just Feels Right» along with advertising describing Mazda’s use of Kansei engineering (1990–1995); «Passion for the road» (1996); «Get in. Be moved.» (1997–2000). Another marketing slogan was «Sakes Alive!», for its truck line.
Since 2000, Mazda has used the phrase «Zoom-Zoom» to describe what it calls the «emotion of motion» that it claims is inherent in its cars.[60] Extremely successful and long-lasting (when compared to other automotive marketing taglines), the Zoom-Zoom campaign has now spread around the world from its initial use in North America.[61]
The Zoom-Zoom campaign has been accompanied by the «Zoom-Zoom-Zoom» song in many television and radio advertisements. The original version, performed by Jibril Serapis Bey (used in commercials in Europe, Japan and South Africa), was recorded long before it became the official song for Mazda as part of a soundtrack to the movie Only The Strong (released in 1993). The Serapis Bey version is a cover of a traditional Capoeira song, called «Capoeira Mata Um». In 2010, its current slogan is «Zoom Zoom Forever». The longer slogan (Used in TV ads) is «Zoom Zoom, Today, Tomorrow, Forever».
Early ads in the Zoom-Zoom campaign also featured a young boy (Micah Kanters) whispering the «Zoom-Zoom» tagline.[62]
Since 2011, Mazda has still used the Zoom-Zoom tagline in another campaign called «What Do You Drive?». The punchline for this is «At Mazda, we believe because if it’s not worth driving, it’s not worth building. We build Mazdas. What do you drive?».
In 2015, Mazda had launched a new campaign under a new tagline, «Driving Matters», coinciding with the release of the redesigned MX-5.[63] This campaign was meant to solidify Mazda’s «Zoom Zoom» slogan. A 60-second long advertisement titled «A Driver’s Life», coincided with the new tagline on the following week.
See also
- List of Mazda engines
- List of Mazda facilities
- List of Mazda model codes
- List of Mazda vehicles
References
- ^ a b c «Consolidated Financial Results» (PDF). mazda.com/investors. Retrieved June 21, 2011.
- ^ Tajitsu, Naomi (August 4, 2017). «Toyota takes stake in Mazda, links up for $1.6 billion U.S. plant». Reuters. Retrieved December 14, 2019.
- ^ «Offices Archived October 7, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.» Mazda. Retrieved on October 29, 2009.
- ^ «MAZDA:Mazda Production and Sales Results for December 2007 and for January through December 2007 (Flash Report) | Production and Salese Results». Archived from the original on April 18, 2008. Retrieved July 31, 2016.
- ^ «World motor vehicle production OICA correspondents survey without double counts world ranking of manufacturers year 2015» (PDF).
- ^ Corporate Financing and Governance in Japan: The Road to the Future, page 153, By Takeo Hoshi, Anil Kashyap
- ^ «GREAT CARS OF MAZDA». Retrieved October 8, 2017.
- ^ «A Story Behind the Name of ‘Mazda’«. Retrieved April 11, 2022.
- ^ «MAZDA: Mazda-Go 3-wheeled trucks». www.mazda.com. Retrieved April 16, 2019.
- ^ The Globe: In Search of the Origins of Mazda, Mazda Motor Corporation, January 30, 1990, p. 73
- ^ «A Story Behind the Name of «Mazda»«. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
- ^ «Development of domestic 5-channel system and management crisis [Mazda 100-year history, 25th, Chapter 7 Part 3]». Cliccar.com. Cliccar. July 25, 2020. Retrieved November 11, 2021.
- ^ Asian Firms: History, Institutions and Management, page 24, By Frank B. Tipton
- ^ Corporate Financing and Governance in Japan: The Road to the Future, page 153 By Takeo Hoshi, Anil Kashyap
- ^ Asian Firms: History, Institutions and Management, page 24, By Frank B. Tipton
- ^ Doner, Richard F. (1991), Driving a Bargain: Automobile Industrialization and Japanese Firms in Southeast Asia, Berkeley, Los Angeles, and Oxford: University of California, p. 294, ISBN 0-520-06938-2
- ^ Between MITI and the Market: Japanese Industrial Policy for High Technology, page 139 By Daniel I. Okimoto
- ^ «Mazda Annual Report 2017» (PDF). Mazda Motor Corporation. p. 59. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 21, 2018. Retrieved January 20, 2018.
- ^ Stock and Bond Information, Mazda, March 31, 2014
- ^ a b Mazda Annual Report 1980, Hiroshima, Japan: Toyo Kogyo Co., Ltd., March 1981, p. 3
- ^ «Family tree bears fruit», Christopher de Fraga,The Age, 1 June 1984, page 18
- ^ «Telstar should keep Ford on top», Christopher de Fraga,The Age, June 14, 1983, page 18
- ^ «Ford, Mazda Zoom Apart». CAR. South Africa. September 1, 2002.
- ^ Australia Welcomes The ‘new’ Migrants, The Age, June 16, 1986, page 43
- ^ «Mazda Has Used Four Different Logos Since the 1980s». Retrieved January 30, 2019.
- ^ «The Evolution of the Mazda Logo and Brand». Inside Mazda. April 21, 2016. Retrieved January 26, 2022.
- ^ Ramey, Jay (March 15, 2018). «Rare anywhere: Mazda Navajo». Auto Week. US. Retrieved October 20, 2022.
- ^ «Mazda Kills B-Series Pickup». Automobile Magazine. September 16, 2009. Archived from the original on June 30, 2010. Retrieved June 28, 2010.
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ^ Rowley, Ian (October 11, 2008). «Ford to Sell Mazda?». Business Week. Archived from the original on October 14, 2008. Retrieved October 12, 2008.
- ^ «Ford to Sell 20% of stake in Mazda » Stuff going on in the world». Miscstuff.wordpress.com. November 18, 2008. Retrieved May 7, 2009.
- ^ Henry, Jim (November 24, 2008). «Ford Sells Controlling Stake in Mazda». CBS News. Retrieved July 3, 2016.
- ^ Chang-Ran Kim (November 18, 2008). «Ford abandons Mazda control with 20 percent stake sale». Reuters. Archived from the original on October 16, 2015. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
- ^ «Ford, Trying to Raise Cash, Sells Stake in Mazda». New York Times. November 18, 2008.
- ^ «Ford to Change Stake in Mazda». Ford Motor Company. November 18, 2010. Archived from the original on July 11, 2011. Retrieved March 9, 2011.
- ^ Taniguchi, Takako (October 18, 2010). «Sumitomo Mitsui To Overtake Ford as Mazda’s Top Shareholder, Chairman Says». Bloomberg. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
- ^ «Ford sells remaining stake in Mazda». Nikkei. November 13, 2015. Retrieved February 18, 2017.
- ^ Mukai, Anna; Hagiwara, Yuki (March 5, 2012). «Mazda’s Record Share Sale to Help Boost Capital After Losses». bloomberg.com. Retrieved September 3, 2015.
- ^ «UPDATE 1-Mazda, Sumitomo to build Mexico car plant -Nikkei». Reuters. November 30, 2010. Archived from the original on November 17, 2015. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
- ^ «Toyota, Mazda form partnership to share technologies, confront cost challenges». Automotive News. May 13, 2015. Retrieved April 17, 2016.
- ^ «It Was Japan’s Most Daring Car. Then the Economy Imploded». Jalopnik. December 20, 2018. Retrieved December 17, 2021.
- ^ «2021 (Full Year) Global: Mazda Worldwide Car Sales, Production, and Exports». January 31, 2022. Retrieved December 26, 2022.
- ^ Cain, Timothy (May 15, 2017). «Mazda Wants 2 Percent U.S. Market Share, But Not Just Any Ol’ 2 Percent Market Share (15 May 2017)». The Truth about Cars. Retrieved May 30, 2017.
- ^ Wayland, Michael (May 15, 2017). «Mazda’s 2% solution». Automotive News. Retrieved May 30, 2017.
- ^ «Mazda окончательно уходит из России». www.gazeta.ru. November 10, 2022.
- ^ Alan Ohnsman (October 27, 2007). «Nissan, Honda Seek Edge With Low-Emission Cars at Tokyo Show». Bloomberg. Retrieved March 29, 2010.
- ^ Chas Hallet (August 28, 2008). «Mazda plans Volt rival». Autocar. Retrieved May 7, 2009.
- ^ «Mazda Delivers Premacy Hydrogen RE Hybrid to Iwatani Corporation for use in Kyushu» (Press release). Mazda. January 13, 2010. Retrieved March 29, 2010.
- ^ «TMC and Mazda Agree to Hybrid System Technology License» (PDF) (Press release). Toyota & Mazda. March 29, 2010. Retrieved March 29, 2010.
- ^ «Bioplastic, Research, Environmentally | Fabric and consoles in Mazda». bioplastics24.com. May 1, 2006. Archived from the original on December 3, 2008. Retrieved May 7, 2009.
- ^ a b «The Rotary Club», Don Sherman, Automobile Magazine, February 2008, pp 76–79
- ^ «daytona rx5». Mazdarx5.com. Archived from the original on July 14, 2011. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
- ^ «Champ Car Atlantic News». Champcaratlantic.com. Retrieved September 29, 2010.[permanent dead link]
- ^ MAZDA:Basic Idea on Community and Social Contributions | With Communities and Society Archived September 17, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Brown, Maury. «After 17 Years, Mazda Dropping Naming Rights To Laguna Seca Raceway». Forbes. Retrieved August 9, 2022.
- ^ «Track Sponsors». Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca. Archived from the original on December 31, 2004.
- ^ Marta Vieira da Silva
- ^ Universidad Católica presento cinco refuerzos para la Liga Nacional de Básquetbol 2016-2017 El Deportero, 30 September 2016. Accessed 8 April 2020. (in Spanish)
- ^ «Mazda Challenges Consumers in Zoom-Zoom Contest». Archived from the original on April 22, 2008. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
- ^ «What’s Zoom Zoom ? | Mazda Spirit». MAZDA. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
- ^ «Interview with Micah Kanters». Shufflingdead.com. September 10, 2004. Archived from the original on May 28, 2010. Retrieved June 28, 2010.
- ^ Nelson, Gabe (May 21, 2015). «Mazda’s new mantra: ‘Driving Matters’«. Automotive News. Retrieved July 22, 2015.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mazda.
- Official website
Coordinates: 34°22′37″N 132°30′03″E / 34.3770577°N 132.5008222°E
Headquarters in Fuchū, Japan (2020) |
|
Native name |
マツダ株式会社 |
---|---|
Romanized name |
Matsuda Kabushiki-Gaisha |
Type | Public (K.K.) |
Traded as |
TYO: 7261 |
Industry | Automotive |
Founded | 30 January 1920; 102 years ago |
Founder | Jujiro Matsuda |
Headquarters | 3-1 Shinchi, Fuchū, Hiroshima, Japan |
Area served |
Worldwide |
Key people |
Kiyotaka Shobuda (Chairman) Akira Marumoto (President and CEO) |
Products | Motor vehicles, engines (1,202,489 units, 2016) |
Revenue | ¥3.4 trillion (FY 2016)[1] |
Operating income |
¥22.6 billion (FY 2016)[1] |
Net income |
¥13.4 billion (FY 2016)[1] |
Owners | Japan Trustee Services Bank (6.3%) Toyota Motor Corporation (5%)[2] The Master Trust Bank of Japan (4.7%) Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (2.2%) |
Number of employees |
46,398 (2016) |
Website | www.mazda.com |
Mazda Motor Corporation (Japanese: マツダ株式会社, Hepburn: Matsuda Kabushiki-Gaisha), commonly referred to as simply Mazda, is a Japanese multinational automotive manufacturer headquartered in Fuchū, Hiroshima, Japan.[4]
In 2015, Mazda produced 1.5 million vehicles for global sales, the majority of which (nearly one million) were produced in the company’s Japanese plants, with the remainder coming from a variety of other plants worldwide.[5] During this time, Mazda was the 15th-largest automaker in terms of production globally.[6]
History
Creation
The first registered corporate logo, which appeared on three-wheel trucks in 1936.
The first stylized branding. The three mountains (representing Hiroshima) also form the Latin alphabet letter M, which is duplicated three times for «Mazda Motor Manufacturer». The long side extensions represent wings for agility and speed.
Mazda began as the Toyo Cork Kogyo Co., Ltd, as a cork-making factory founded in Hiroshima, Japan, 30 January 1920. Toyo Cork Kogyo renamed itself to Toyo Kogyo Co., Ltd. in 1927. In the late 1920s the company had to be saved from bankruptcy by Hiroshima Saving Bank and other business leaders in Hiroshima.[7]
In 1931, Toyo Kogyo moved from manufacturing machine tools to vehicles with the introduction of the Mazda-Go auto rickshaw. The name Mazda came into existence with the production of the company’s first three-wheeled trucks. Other candidates for a model name included Sumera-Go, Tenshi-Go, and more.[8]
Officially, the company states:
Mazda comes from Ahura Mazda, the god of harmony, intelligence and wisdom from the earliest civilization in West Asia. Key members of Toyo Kogyo interpreted Mazda as a symbol of the beginning of the East and the West civilization, but also a symbol of the automotive civilization and culture.»[9]
The company’s website further notes that the name also derives from the name of the company’s founder, Jujiro Matsuda.[10] The alternative proposed names mean «god» (Sumera) and «angel» (Tenshi); both indicate Matsuda’s strong interest in human faith.[11]
The Mazda lettering was used in combination with the corporate emblem of Mitsubishi Motors, which was responsible for sales, to produce the Toyo Kogyo three-wheeled truck registered trademark.[12]
Toyo Kogyo produced weapons for the Japanese military throughout the Second World War, most notably the series 30 through 35 Type 99 rifle. The company formally adopted the Mazda name in 1984, though every automobile sold from the beginning bore that name. The Mazda R360 was introduced in 1960, followed by the Mazda Carol in 1962 and were sold at a specific retail dealership that sold passenger cars called «Mazda Auto Store» whereas commercial products were sold at «Mazda Store». As Mazda continued to offer passenger cars like the Savanna, Familia, Luce, Cosmo and Capella, they were added to the «Mazda Auto Store» network only.[13]
Wankel engine adoption
Symbol and corporate mark as seen on most Mazda cars from the Mazda R360 until 1975
Beginning in the 1960s, Mazda was inspired by the NSU Ro 80 and decided to put a major engineering effort into development of the Wankel rotary engine as a way of differentiating itself from other Japanese auto companies. The company formed a business relationship with German company NSU and began with the limited-production Cosmo Sport of 1967, and continuing to the present day with the Pro Mazda Championship, Mazda has become the sole manufacturer of Wankel-type engines for the automotive market, mainly by way of attrition. (NSU and Citroën both gave up on the design during the 1970s, and prototype Corvette efforts by General Motors never made it to production.)
This effort to bring attention to itself apparently helped, as Mazda rapidly began to export its vehicles. Both piston-powered and rotary-powered models made their way around the world. The rotary models quickly became popular for their combination of good power and light weight when compared to piston-engined competitors that required heavier V6 or V8 engines to produce the same power. The R100 and the RX series (RX-2, RX-3, and RX-4) led the company’s export efforts.
During 1968, Mazda started formal operations in Canada (MazdaCanada) although Mazdas were seen in Canada as early as 1959. In 1970, Mazda formally entered the American market (Mazda North American Operations) and was very successful there, going so far as to create the Mazda Rotary Pickup (based on the conventional piston-powered B-Series model) solely for North American buyers. To this day, Mazda remains the only automaker to have produced a Wankel-powered pickup truck. Additionally, it is also the only marque to have ever offered a rotary-powered bus (the Mazda Parkway, offered only in Japan) or station wagon (within the RX-3 and RX-4 lines for certain markets). After nine years of development, Mazda finally launched its new model in the U.S. in 1970.[14]
Mazda’s rotary success continued until the onset of the 1973 oil crisis. As American buyers (as well as those in other nations) quickly turned to vehicles with better fuel efficiency, the relatively thirsty rotary-powered models began to fall out of favor. Combined with being the least-efficient automaker in Japan (in terms of productivity), inability to adjust to excess inventory and over-reliance on the U.S. market, the company suffered a huge loss in 1975.[15][16] An already heavily indebted Toyo Kogyo was on the verge of bankruptcy and was only saved through the intervention of Sumitomo keiretsu group, namely Sumitomo Bank, and the company’s subcontractors and distributors.[17][18] However, the company had not totally turned its back on piston engines, as it continued to produce a variety of four-cylinder models throughout the 1970s. The smaller Familia line in particular became very important to Mazda’s worldwide sales after 1973, as did the somewhat larger Capella series.
Mazda RX-7 (first generation)
Mazda refocused its efforts and made the rotary engine a choice for the sporting motorist rather than a mainstream powerplant. Starting with the lightweight RX-7 in 1978 and continuing with the modern RX-8, Mazda has continued its dedication to this unique powerplant. This switch in focus also resulted in the development of another lightweight sports car, the piston-powered Mazda MX-5 Miata (sold as the Eunos and later Mazda Roadster in Japan), inspired by the concept ‘jinba ittai’. Introduced in 1989 to worldwide acclaim, the Roadster has been widely credited with reviving the concept of the small sports car after its decline in the late 1970s.
Partnership with Ford
From 1974 to 2015, Mazda had a partnership with the Ford Motor Company, which acquired a 24.5% stake in 1979, upped to a 33.4% ownership of Mazda in May 1995.[19] Under the administration of Alan Mulally, Ford gradually divested its stake in Mazda from 2008 to 2015, with Ford holding 2.1% of Mazda stock as of 2014[20] and severing most production as well as development ties.
This partnership with Ford began owing to Mazda’s financial difficulties during the 1960s. Starting in 1979 by expanding their 7 percent financial stake to 24.5%, Ford expanded an existing partnership with Mazda, resulting in various joint projects. The cooperation had begun in 1971 when the Mazda B-Series spawned a Ford Courier variant for North America, a version which was later offered in other markets as well. Mazda’s Bongo and Titan cab-over trucks were sold with Ford badging in mainly Asia and the Pacific region beginning in 1976.[21] These included large and small efforts in all areas of the automotive landscape, most notably in the realm of pickup trucks and smaller cars. Mazda began supplying manual transaxles to Ford in the spring of 1980.[21] Mazda’s Familia platform was used for Ford models like the Laser and Escort beginning in 1980, while the Capella architecture found its way into Ford’s Telstar sedan and Probe sports models.
During the 1980s, Ford-badged Mazda products replaced much of their own European-sourced lineup, especially in the Asia-Pacific markets, with the Laser replacing the Escort[22] and the Telstar replacing the Cortina.[23] In some cases, such as New Zealand and South Africa, these were assembled alongside their Mazda-badged equivalents, the Mazda 323 (Familia) and 626 (Capella).
Following the closure of its own assembly plant in New Zealand, Mazda established a joint venture with Ford New Zealand known as Vehicle Assemblers of New Zealand (VANZ), while in South Africa, Ford’s local subsidiary merged with Sigma Motor Corporation, which already assembled Mazdas in the country, to form Samcor, although the sharing of models proved unpopular with both Ford and Mazda customers.[24] In other markets such as Australia, however, the 323 and 626 were always fully imported, with only the Laser and Telstar assembled locally.[25] In Japan, the Laser and Telstar were also sold alongside their Mazda-badged brethren, but the Festiva was not sold as a Mazda 121 on the Japanese market.
In North America, the Probe was built in a new Mazda company plant in Flat Rock, Michigan, along with the mainstream 626 sedan and a companion Mazda MX-6 sports coupe. Ford also lent Mazda some of its capacity when needed: the Mazda 121 sold in Europe and South Africa was, for a time, a variant of the Ford Fiesta built in plants in Europe and South Africa. Mazda also made an effort in the past to sell some of Ford’s cars in Japan, mainly through its Autorama dealer group.
In 1991, Mazda adopted a corporate symbol which was to represent a sun and a flame standing for heartfelt passion. This is commonly referred to in Mazda enthusiast circles as the «cylon» logo.[26]
Shortly after the release of the new symbol, the design was smoothed out to reduce its similarity to Renault’s. This is sometimes referred to as the «eternal flame» logo. It also represented the design of the rotary engine that Mazda was famous for.
The brand symbol, adopted in 1997, with the V-shape wings inside, standing for “growth” and “improvement” and Mazda logo in Mazda blue.[27] A slightly modified version was introduced in 2015.
Mazda also helped Ford develop the 1991 Explorer, which Mazda sold as the 2-door only Mazda Navajo from 1991 through 1994. However, Mazda’s version was unsuccessful, while the Ford (available from the start as a 4-door or 2-door model) instantly became the best-selling sport-utility vehicle in the United States and kept that title for over a decade.[28] Mazda has used Ford’s Ranger pickup as the basis for its North American–market B-Series trucks, starting in 1994 and continuing through 2010, when Mazda discontinued importing its B-Series trucks to North America, due to costs associated with the chicken tax.[29]
Following its long-held fascination with alternative engine technology, Mazda introduced the first Miller cycle engine for automotive use in the Millenia luxury sedan of 1995. Though the Millenia (and its Miller-type V6 engine) were discontinued in 2002, the company has recently introduced a much smaller Miller-cycle four-cylinder engine for use in its Demio starting in 2008. As with its leadership in Wankel technology, Mazda remains (so far) the only automaker to have used a Miller-cycle engine in the automotive realm.
Further financial difficulties at Mazda during the 1990s (partly caused by losses related to the 1997 Asian financial crisis[citation needed]) caused Ford to increase its stake to a 33.4-percent controlling interest in May 1996. In June 1996, Henry Wallace was appointed president, and he set about restructuring Mazda and setting it on a new strategic direction. He laid out a new direction for the brand including the design of the present Mazda marque; he laid out a new product plan to achieve synergies with Ford, and he launched Mazda’s digital innovation program to speed up the development of new products. At the same time, he started taking control of overseas distributors, rationalized dealerships and manufacturing facilities, and driving much-needed efficiencies and cost reductions in Mazda’s operations. Much of his early work put Mazda back into profitability and laid the foundations for future success. Wallace was succeeded by James Miller in November 1997, followed in December 1999 by Ford executive Mark Fields, who has been credited with expanding Mazda’s new product lineup and leading the turnaround during the early 2000s. Ford’s increased influence during the 1990s allowed Mazda to claim another distinction in history, having maintained the first foreign-born head of a Japanese car company, Henry Wallace.
Divestment by Ford
Amid the world financial crisis in the fall of 2008, reports emerged that Ford was contemplating a sale of its stake in Mazda as a way of streamlining its asset base.[30] BusinessWeek explained the alliance between Ford and Mazda has been a very successful one, with Mazda saving perhaps $90 million a year in development costs and Ford «several times» that, and that a sale of its stake in Mazda would be a desperate measure.[31] On November 18, 2008, Ford announced that it would sell a 20% stake in Mazda, reducing its stake to 13.4%, thus surrendering control of the company, which it held since 1996.[32][33] The following day, Mazda announced that, as part of the deal, it was buying back 6.8% of its shares from Ford for about US$185 million while the rest would be acquired by business partners of the company.[34] It was also reported that Hisakazu Imaki would be stepping down as chief executive, to be replaced by Takashi Yamanouchi.[35] On November 18, 2010, Ford reduced its stake further to 3%, citing the reduction of ownership would allow greater flexibility to pursue growth in emerging markets, and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group was believed to become its largest shareholder. Ford and Mazda remained strategic partners through joint ventures and exchanges of technological information.[36][37]
Mazda’s first mass-produced electric car, the MX-30
On September 30, 2015, when Ford’s shares had sunk to a little over 2% due to stock dilution, Ford sold its remaining shares in Mazda.[38]
Post-Ford efforts
In 2011, Mazda raised more than 150 billion yen (US$1.9 billion) in a record share sale to replenish capital, as it suffered its biggest annual loss in 11 years. Part of the proceeds were used to build an auto plant in Salamanca, Mexico.[39] The Mexican plant was built jointly by the company and Sumitomo Corporation.[40]
In May 2015, the company signed an agreement with Toyota to form a «long-term partnership», that would, among others, see Mazda supply Toyota with fuel-efficient SkyActiv gasoline and diesel engine technology in exchange for hydrogen fuel cell systems.[41]
Marques
Mazda tried using a number of different marques in the Japanese (and occasionally Australian) markets in the 1990s, including Autozam, Eunos, and ɛ̃fini. The motivation was brought on by market competition from other Japanese automakers efforts in offering vehicles at multiple Japanese dealership networks offered by Toyota, Nissan, and Honda. Mazda’s implementation of brand diversification reflected a Japanese engineering philosophy, called Kansei engineering, which was used as an advertising slogan in North America.
One of the oddest sub-marques was M2, used on three rare variants of the Eunos Roadster (the M2-1001, M2-1002 and M2-1028) and one of the Autozam AZ-1 (M2-1015). M2 even had its own avant-garde company headquarters, but was shut down after a very short period of operation.
In early 1992, Mazda planned to release a luxury marque, Amati, to challenge Acura, Infiniti, and Lexus in North America, which was to begin selling in late 1993. The initial Amati range would have included the Amati 500 (which became the Eunos 800 in Japan and Australia, Mazda Millenia in the U.S., and Mazda Xedos 9 in Europe), a rebadged version of the Mazda Cosmo and the Amati 1000 (a rear-wheel drive V12 competitor to the Lexus LS400[42]). The Amati marque was eventually scrapped before any cars hit the market. It is perhaps just a curiosity, but «Amati» happens to be an anagram of «Miata».
In Europe, the Xedos name was also associated with the Mazda Xedos 6, the two models were in production from 1992 until 1997. The Xedos line was marketed under the Mazda marque, and used the Mazda badge from the corresponding years.
This diversification stressed the product development groups at Mazda past its limits. Instead of having a half-dozen variations on any given platform, developers were asked to work on dozens of different models at the same time. Consumers were confused as well by the explosion of similar new models. This selective marketing experiment was ended in the mid-1990s due to economic conditions, largely attributed to the collapse of the Japanese asset price bubble in 1991.
Leadership
- Jujiro Matsuda (1920–1951)
- Tsuneji Matsuda (1952–1970)
- Kouhei Matsuda (1970–1977)
- Yoshiki Yamasaki (1977–1984)
- Kenichi Yamamoto (1984–1987)
- Masanori Furuta (1987–1991)
- Yoshihiro Wada (1991–1996)
- Henry Wallace (1996–1997, appointed by Ford Motor Company, first non-Japanese CEO of a Japanese automaker)
- James E. Miller (1997–1999)
- Mark Fields (1999–2002)
- Lewis Booth (2002–2003)
- Hisakazu Imaki (2003–2008)
- Takashi Yamanouchi (2008–2013)
- Masamichi Kogai (2013–present)
Markets
As of January 2022, the United States is Mazda’s biggest market, followed by China and Japan.[43] Mazda’s market share in the U.S. fell to a 10-year low of 1.7 percent in 2016.[44] Mazda’s brand loyalty was 39 percent in 2016, below the industry average of 53 percent.[45] On October 24, 2022, Mazda decided to get rid of assets in Russia, with the company transferring a stake in a joint venture in Vladivostok to Sollers JSC for 1 euro.[46]
Environmental efforts
Mazda has conducted research in hydrogen-powered vehicles for several decades.Mazda has developed a hybrid version of its Premacy compact minivan using a version of its signature rotary engine that can run on hydrogen or gasoline named the Mazda Premacy Hydrogen RE Hybrid. Despite plans to release it in 2008,[47][48] as of 2010 the vehicle is in limited trials.[49]
In 2010, Toyota and Mazda announced a supply agreement for the hybrid technology used in Toyota’s Prius model.[50]
Bio-car
Mazda is finding a host of alternative uses for a variety of materials and substances, ranging from plastic to milk, in its vehicles, as it aims to become more environmentally-friendly. Mazda introduced some of these innovations (bioplastic internal consoles and bio-fabric seats) in its Mazda5 model at EcoInnovasia 2008, at the Queen Sirikit National Convention Center in Bangkok. Up to 30% of the interior parts in the Mazda5 are made of non-biomaterial components, e.g. Poti (gobar of cows).[51]
SkyActiv technology
SkyActiv technology is an umbrella name for a range of technologies used in certain new Mazda vehicles. These vehicles include the Mazda2/Demio, Mazda3/Axela, Mazda6/Atenza, and CX-5. Together these technologies increase fuel economy to a level similar to a hybrid drivetrain. Engine output is increased and emission levels are reduced. These technologies include high compression ratio gasoline engines (13.0 to 1), reduced compression diesel engines (14.0 to 1) with new 2-stage turbocharger design, highly efficient automatic transmissions, lighter weight manual transmissions, lightweight body designs and electric power steering. It is also possible to combine these technologies with a hybrid drivetrain for even greater fuel economy.
Motorsport
In the racing world, Mazda has had substantial success with both its signature Wankel-engine cars (in two-rotor, three-rotor, and four-rotor forms) as well as its piston-engine models. Mazda vehicles and engines compete in a wide variety of disciplines and series around the world. In 1991, Mazda became the first Japanese automaker to win the 24 Hours of Le Mans overall.
International competition
Mazda’s competition debut was on October 20, 1968, when two Mazda Cosmo Sport 110S coupes entered the 84-hour Marathon de la Route ultra-endurance race at the Nürburgring, one finishing in fourth place and the other breaking an axle after 81 hours.[52] The next year, Mazda raced Mazda Familia R100 M10A coupes. After winning the Singapore Grand Prix in April 1969 and coming in fifth and sixth in the Spa 24 Hours (beaten only by Porsche 911s), on October 19, 1969, Mazda again entered the 84 hour Nürburgring race with four Familias. Only one of these finished, taking fifth place.
The first racing victory by a Wankel-engined car in the United States was in 1973, when Pat Bedard won an IMSA RS race at Lime Rock Park in a Mazda RX-2.[52]
In 1976, Ray Walle, owner of Z&W Mazda, drove a Cosmo (Mazda RX-5) from the dealership in Princeton, New Jersey, to Daytona, won the Touring Class Under 2.5 Liters at the 24 Hours of Daytona, and drove the car back to New Jersey. The Cosmo placed 18th overall in a field of 72. The only modifications were racing brake pads, exhaust, and safety equipment.[53]
After substantial successes by the Mazda RX-2 and Mazda RX-3, the Mazda RX-7 has won more IMSA races in its class than any other model of automobile, with its hundredth victory on September 2, 1990. Following that, the RX-7 won its class in the IMSA 24 Hours of Daytona race ten years in a row, starting in 1982. The RX-7 won the IMSA Grand Touring Under Two Liter (GTU) championship each year from 1980 through 1987, inclusive.
In 1991, a four-rotor Mazda 787B (2622 cc actual, rated by FIA formula at 4708 cc) won the 24 Hours of Le Mans auto race outright. The 787B’s triumph remains unparalleled, as it remains the only non-piston-engined car ever to win at Le Mans, and Mazda is the first Japanese marque to have won overall at Le Mans (though Nissan had closed down its World Sportscar Championship programme and Toyota had opted to take a sabbatical for most of 1991 in order to develop its 3.5-litre TS010[original research?]). This led to a ban on rotary engines in the Le Mans race starting in 1992, which has since been rescinded. After the 1991 race, the winning engine was publicly dismantled for internal examination, which demonstrated that despite 24 hours of extremely hard use it had accumulated very little wear.
The Le Mans win in 1991 followed a decade of class wins from other Mazda prototypes, including the 757 and 767. The Sigma MC74 powered by a Mazda 12A engine was the first engine and team from outside Western Europe or the United States to finish the entire 24 hours of the Le Mans race, in 1974. Mazda is also the most reliable finisher at Le Mans (with the exception of Honda, which has entered only three cars in only one year), with 67% of entries finishing. Mazda returned to prototype racing in 2005 with the introduction of the Courage C65 LMP2 car at the American Le Mans Series race at Road Atlanta. This prototype racer uses the Renesis Wankel from the RX-8.
Mazdas have also enjoyed substantial success in World Land Speed competition, SCCA competition, drag racing, pro rally competition (the Familia appeared in the WRC several times during the late ’80s and early ’90s), the One Lap of America race (winning SUV & truck in a MazdaSpeed5), and other venues. Wankel engines have been banned for some time from international Formula One racing,[citation needed] as well as from United States midget racing, after Gene Angelillo won the North East Midget Racing Association championship in 1985 with a car powered by a 13B engine, and again in 1986 in a car powered by a 12A engine.
Spec series
The Cooper Tires Atlantic Championship powered by Mazda is a North American open wheel racing series. It is the top level of the MAZDASPEED ladder, a driver development program which rewards season winners of one level with automatic rides at the next level. Since 2006, the Atlantic Championship has been run exclusively with Swift 016.a chassis powered by Mazda-Cosworth MZR 2300 cc (2.3L) DOHC inline-4 engines producing 300 bhp (224 kW). The cars are capable of speeds in excess of 175 mph (282 km/h).[54]
Formula Mazda features open wheel race cars with Mazda engines, adaptable to both oval tracks and road courses, on several levels of competition. Since 1991, the professionally organized Pro Mazda Championship has been the most popular format for sponsors, spectators, and upward bound drivers. It is the second-highest level on the aforementioned Mazdaspeed driver development ladder. Engines for the Star Mazda series are all built by one engine builder, certified to produce the prescribed power, and sealed to discourage tampering. They are in a relatively mild state of racing tune, so that they are extremely reliable and can go years between motor rebuilds.
Spec Miata has become one of the most popular and most affordable road racing classes in North America. The Spec Miata (SM) class is intended to provide the opportunity to compete in low-cost, production-based cars with limited modifications, suitable for racing competition. The rules are intentionally designed to be more open than the Showroom Stock class but more restricted than the Improved Touring class.
Spec RX-7 is also a popular club racing class primarily due to the availability of first-generation RX7 cars and the low startup cost.[citation needed]
Mazda’s headquarters in Fuchū, Hiroshima
Mazda is a major sponsor to several professional sports teams, including:
- Hometown teams:
- Sanfrecce Hiroshima (J. League): Originally known as Toyo Kogyo Soccer Club and founded in 1938, it was owned directly by Mazda until 1992 when Mazda reduced its share to professionalize the club for the new J. League.
- Hiroshima Toyo Carp (Nippon Professional Baseball): The «Toyo» part of the team’s name is in honor of Mazda’s part-ownership of the team since 1968 (when Mazda was still known as Toyo Kogyo). The Matsuda family, descended from the founder of Mazda, holds the majority share in team ownership.
- Teams abroad:
- North Melbourne Football Club (Australian Football League)
- ACF Fiorentina (Serie A)
- Nakhon Ratchasima (Thai League 1)
The company also sponsors various marathon and relay race events in Japan, such as the Hiroshima International Peace Marathon and the Hiroshima Prefectural Ekiden Race, along with numerous other sporting and charity endeavors in Hiroshima and Hofu.[55] Mazda was also the league sponsor for the now-defunct Australian Rugby Championship.
Mazda maintained sponsorship of the Laguna Seca racing course in California from 2001 until February 2018,[56] going so far as to use it for its own automotive testing purposes as well as the numerous racing events (including several Mazda-specific series) that it used to host, as well as for the 2003 launch of the Mazda RX-8.[57] Since April 2018, the venue’s primary corporate sponsor is WeatherTech.
Mazda also sponsors the Western New York Flash, a professional women’s soccer team that plays in the WPA and has some of the best players in the world, including world player of the year.[58]
Mazda has been a sponsor of Club Deportivo Universidad Católica’s basketball team of the Liga Nacional de Básquetbol de Chile.[59]
Marketing
Mazda’s past advertising slogans included: «The more you look, the more you like» (1970s to early 1980s); «Experience Mazda» (mid-1980s); «An intense commitment to your total satisfaction, that’s The Mazda Way» (late 1980s); «It Just Feels Right» along with advertising describing Mazda’s use of Kansei engineering (1990–1995); «Passion for the road» (1996); «Get in. Be moved.» (1997–2000). Another marketing slogan was «Sakes Alive!», for its truck line.
Since 2000, Mazda has used the phrase «Zoom-Zoom» to describe what it calls the «emotion of motion» that it claims is inherent in its cars.[60] Extremely successful and long-lasting (when compared to other automotive marketing taglines), the Zoom-Zoom campaign has now spread around the world from its initial use in North America.[61]
The Zoom-Zoom campaign has been accompanied by the «Zoom-Zoom-Zoom» song in many television and radio advertisements. The original version, performed by Jibril Serapis Bey (used in commercials in Europe, Japan and South Africa), was recorded long before it became the official song for Mazda as part of a soundtrack to the movie Only The Strong (released in 1993). The Serapis Bey version is a cover of a traditional Capoeira song, called «Capoeira Mata Um». In 2010, its current slogan is «Zoom Zoom Forever». The longer slogan (Used in TV ads) is «Zoom Zoom, Today, Tomorrow, Forever».
Early ads in the Zoom-Zoom campaign also featured a young boy (Micah Kanters) whispering the «Zoom-Zoom» tagline.[62]
Since 2011, Mazda has still used the Zoom-Zoom tagline in another campaign called «What Do You Drive?». The punchline for this is «At Mazda, we believe because if it’s not worth driving, it’s not worth building. We build Mazdas. What do you drive?».
In 2015, Mazda had launched a new campaign under a new tagline, «Driving Matters», coinciding with the release of the redesigned MX-5.[63] This campaign was meant to solidify Mazda’s «Zoom Zoom» slogan. A 60-second long advertisement titled «A Driver’s Life», coincided with the new tagline on the following week.
See also
- List of Mazda engines
- List of Mazda facilities
- List of Mazda model codes
- List of Mazda vehicles
References
- ^ a b c «Consolidated Financial Results» (PDF). mazda.com/investors. Retrieved June 21, 2011.
- ^ Tajitsu, Naomi (August 4, 2017). «Toyota takes stake in Mazda, links up for $1.6 billion U.S. plant». Reuters. Retrieved December 14, 2019.
- ^ «Offices Archived October 7, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.» Mazda. Retrieved on October 29, 2009.
- ^ «MAZDA:Mazda Production and Sales Results for December 2007 and for January through December 2007 (Flash Report) | Production and Salese Results». Archived from the original on April 18, 2008. Retrieved July 31, 2016.
- ^ «World motor vehicle production OICA correspondents survey without double counts world ranking of manufacturers year 2015» (PDF).
- ^ Corporate Financing and Governance in Japan: The Road to the Future, page 153, By Takeo Hoshi, Anil Kashyap
- ^ «GREAT CARS OF MAZDA». Retrieved October 8, 2017.
- ^ «A Story Behind the Name of ‘Mazda’«. Retrieved April 11, 2022.
- ^ «MAZDA: Mazda-Go 3-wheeled trucks». www.mazda.com. Retrieved April 16, 2019.
- ^ The Globe: In Search of the Origins of Mazda, Mazda Motor Corporation, January 30, 1990, p. 73
- ^ «A Story Behind the Name of «Mazda»«. Retrieved November 9, 2018.
- ^ «Development of domestic 5-channel system and management crisis [Mazda 100-year history, 25th, Chapter 7 Part 3]». Cliccar.com. Cliccar. July 25, 2020. Retrieved November 11, 2021.
- ^ Asian Firms: History, Institutions and Management, page 24, By Frank B. Tipton
- ^ Corporate Financing and Governance in Japan: The Road to the Future, page 153 By Takeo Hoshi, Anil Kashyap
- ^ Asian Firms: History, Institutions and Management, page 24, By Frank B. Tipton
- ^ Doner, Richard F. (1991), Driving a Bargain: Automobile Industrialization and Japanese Firms in Southeast Asia, Berkeley, Los Angeles, and Oxford: University of California, p. 294, ISBN 0-520-06938-2
- ^ Between MITI and the Market: Japanese Industrial Policy for High Technology, page 139 By Daniel I. Okimoto
- ^ «Mazda Annual Report 2017» (PDF). Mazda Motor Corporation. p. 59. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 21, 2018. Retrieved January 20, 2018.
- ^ Stock and Bond Information, Mazda, March 31, 2014
- ^ a b Mazda Annual Report 1980, Hiroshima, Japan: Toyo Kogyo Co., Ltd., March 1981, p. 3
- ^ «Family tree bears fruit», Christopher de Fraga,The Age, 1 June 1984, page 18
- ^ «Telstar should keep Ford on top», Christopher de Fraga,The Age, June 14, 1983, page 18
- ^ «Ford, Mazda Zoom Apart». CAR. South Africa. September 1, 2002.
- ^ Australia Welcomes The ‘new’ Migrants, The Age, June 16, 1986, page 43
- ^ «Mazda Has Used Four Different Logos Since the 1980s». Retrieved January 30, 2019.
- ^ «The Evolution of the Mazda Logo and Brand». Inside Mazda. April 21, 2016. Retrieved January 26, 2022.
- ^ Ramey, Jay (March 15, 2018). «Rare anywhere: Mazda Navajo». Auto Week. US. Retrieved October 20, 2022.
- ^ «Mazda Kills B-Series Pickup». Automobile Magazine. September 16, 2009. Archived from the original on June 30, 2010. Retrieved June 28, 2010.
- ^ [1][dead link]
- ^ Rowley, Ian (October 11, 2008). «Ford to Sell Mazda?». Business Week. Archived from the original on October 14, 2008. Retrieved October 12, 2008.
- ^ «Ford to Sell 20% of stake in Mazda » Stuff going on in the world». Miscstuff.wordpress.com. November 18, 2008. Retrieved May 7, 2009.
- ^ Henry, Jim (November 24, 2008). «Ford Sells Controlling Stake in Mazda». CBS News. Retrieved July 3, 2016.
- ^ Chang-Ran Kim (November 18, 2008). «Ford abandons Mazda control with 20 percent stake sale». Reuters. Archived from the original on October 16, 2015. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
- ^ «Ford, Trying to Raise Cash, Sells Stake in Mazda». New York Times. November 18, 2008.
- ^ «Ford to Change Stake in Mazda». Ford Motor Company. November 18, 2010. Archived from the original on July 11, 2011. Retrieved March 9, 2011.
- ^ Taniguchi, Takako (October 18, 2010). «Sumitomo Mitsui To Overtake Ford as Mazda’s Top Shareholder, Chairman Says». Bloomberg. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
- ^ «Ford sells remaining stake in Mazda». Nikkei. November 13, 2015. Retrieved February 18, 2017.
- ^ Mukai, Anna; Hagiwara, Yuki (March 5, 2012). «Mazda’s Record Share Sale to Help Boost Capital After Losses». bloomberg.com. Retrieved September 3, 2015.
- ^ «UPDATE 1-Mazda, Sumitomo to build Mexico car plant -Nikkei». Reuters. November 30, 2010. Archived from the original on November 17, 2015. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
- ^ «Toyota, Mazda form partnership to share technologies, confront cost challenges». Automotive News. May 13, 2015. Retrieved April 17, 2016.
- ^ «It Was Japan’s Most Daring Car. Then the Economy Imploded». Jalopnik. December 20, 2018. Retrieved December 17, 2021.
- ^ «2021 (Full Year) Global: Mazda Worldwide Car Sales, Production, and Exports». January 31, 2022. Retrieved December 26, 2022.
- ^ Cain, Timothy (May 15, 2017). «Mazda Wants 2 Percent U.S. Market Share, But Not Just Any Ol’ 2 Percent Market Share (15 May 2017)». The Truth about Cars. Retrieved May 30, 2017.
- ^ Wayland, Michael (May 15, 2017). «Mazda’s 2% solution». Automotive News. Retrieved May 30, 2017.
- ^ «Mazda окончательно уходит из России». www.gazeta.ru. November 10, 2022.
- ^ Alan Ohnsman (October 27, 2007). «Nissan, Honda Seek Edge With Low-Emission Cars at Tokyo Show». Bloomberg. Retrieved March 29, 2010.
- ^ Chas Hallet (August 28, 2008). «Mazda plans Volt rival». Autocar. Retrieved May 7, 2009.
- ^ «Mazda Delivers Premacy Hydrogen RE Hybrid to Iwatani Corporation for use in Kyushu» (Press release). Mazda. January 13, 2010. Retrieved March 29, 2010.
- ^ «TMC and Mazda Agree to Hybrid System Technology License» (PDF) (Press release). Toyota & Mazda. March 29, 2010. Retrieved March 29, 2010.
- ^ «Bioplastic, Research, Environmentally | Fabric and consoles in Mazda». bioplastics24.com. May 1, 2006. Archived from the original on December 3, 2008. Retrieved May 7, 2009.
- ^ a b «The Rotary Club», Don Sherman, Automobile Magazine, February 2008, pp 76–79
- ^ «daytona rx5». Mazdarx5.com. Archived from the original on July 14, 2011. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
- ^ «Champ Car Atlantic News». Champcaratlantic.com. Retrieved September 29, 2010.[permanent dead link]
- ^ MAZDA:Basic Idea on Community and Social Contributions | With Communities and Society Archived September 17, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Brown, Maury. «After 17 Years, Mazda Dropping Naming Rights To Laguna Seca Raceway». Forbes. Retrieved August 9, 2022.
- ^ «Track Sponsors». Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca. Archived from the original on December 31, 2004.
- ^ Marta Vieira da Silva
- ^ Universidad Católica presento cinco refuerzos para la Liga Nacional de Básquetbol 2016-2017 El Deportero, 30 September 2016. Accessed 8 April 2020. (in Spanish)
- ^ «Mazda Challenges Consumers in Zoom-Zoom Contest». Archived from the original on April 22, 2008. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
- ^ «What’s Zoom Zoom ? | Mazda Spirit». MAZDA. Retrieved September 29, 2010.
- ^ «Interview with Micah Kanters». Shufflingdead.com. September 10, 2004. Archived from the original on May 28, 2010. Retrieved June 28, 2010.
- ^ Nelson, Gabe (May 21, 2015). «Mazda’s new mantra: ‘Driving Matters’«. Automotive News. Retrieved July 22, 2015.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mazda.
- Official website
-
1
Mazda Advancement Plan
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Mazda Advancement Plan
-
2
Mazda Performance Series
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Mazda Performance Series
-
3
Mazda electronic control system
Automobile industry: MECS
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Mazda electronic control system
-
4
Faulkner Mazda (Pennsylvania)
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Faulkner Mazda (Pennsylvania)
-
5
Nishimura Mazda Sports Tuning
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Nishimura Mazda Sports Tuning
-
6
интеллектуальная система стоп-старт (разработка фирмы Mazda . SISS автоматически глушит двигатель при остановке автомобиля, устанавливая цилиндры в оптимальное положение для повторного запуска, посл
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > интеллектуальная система стоп-старт (разработка фирмы Mazda . SISS автоматически глушит двигатель при остановке автомобиля, устанавливая цилиндры в оптимальное положение для повторного запуска, посл
-
7
Faulkner Mazda
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Faulkner Mazda
-
8
мазда
Новый русско-английский словарь > мазда
-
9
Мазда
(марка автомобиля японской компании «Мазда») mazda
Русско-английский словарь с пояснениями > Мазда
-
10
EGR valve position sensor
Automobile industry: EGRPS , EPOS , EVP
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > EGR valve position sensor
-
11
Most Always Zipping Dangerously Along
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Most Always Zipping Dangerously Along
-
12
My! Another Zany Detroit Assassin!
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > My! Another Zany Detroit Assassin!
-
13
air bypass solenoid valve
Automobile industry: ABSV
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > air bypass solenoid valve
-
14
anti-afterburn valve
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > anti-afterburn valve
-
15
atmospheric pressure sensor
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > atmospheric pressure sensor
-
16
Ахура-Мазда
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Ахура-Мазда
-
17
Ахурамаэда
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Ахурамаэда
-
18
Владыка Мудрости
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Владыка Мудрости
-
19
Мазда
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Мазда
-
20
Мана
Religion: Manala, Vohu Manah ( Zoroastrianism, one of the six «beneficent immortals» created by Ahura Mazda, the Wise Lord, to assist him in furthering good and destroying evil) Boxy
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > Мана
См. также в других словарях:
-
Mazda MX 5 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 1989 Klasse: Roadster Karosserieversionen: Cabriolet, zweitürig Vorgängermodell: keines Nachfolgemodell … Deutsch Wikipedia
-
Mazda — (Motor Corporation) Rechtsform Kabushiki gaisha (Aktiengesellschaft) ISIN JP3868400007 Gründung … Deutsch Wikipedia
-
Mazda 2 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 2003 Klasse: Kleinwagen Vorgängermodell: Mazda 121 Mazda Demio Nachfolgemodell: keines Der Mazda2 ist ein frontgetriebener … Deutsch Wikipedia
-
Mazda 3 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 2003 Klasse: Kompaktklasse Karosserieversionen: Stufenheck, viertürig Schrägheck, fünftürig Vorgängermodell … Deutsch Wikipedia
-
Mazda 5 — Mazda Mazda5 (2005–2008) 5 Hersteller: Mazda Motor Corporation Produktionszeitraum: seit 2005 … Deutsch Wikipedia
-
Mazda 6 — Mazda 6/Atenza Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 2002 Klasse: Mittelklasse Karosserieversionen: Stufenheck, viertürig Schrägheck, fünftürig Kombi, fünftürig … Deutsch Wikipedia
-
Mazda RX 8 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 2003 Klasse: Sportcoupé … Deutsch Wikipedia
-
Mazda MX-5 — Manufacturer Mazda Also called Mazda MX 5 Miata Mazda Miata Eunos Roadster Mazda Roadster Product … Wikipedia
-
Mazda RX-8 — Manufacturer Mazda Production 2003–2011[1] Assembly … Wikipedia
-
Mazda RX-7 — Manufacturer Mazda Production 1978–2002 811,634 produced[1] Assem … Wikipedia
-
Mazda MX-5 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 1989 Klasse: Roadster Karosserieversionen: Cabriolet, Stoffverdeck Vorgängermodell: keines Na … Deutsch Wikipedia
Морфемный разбор слова:
Однокоренные слова к слову:
mazda
1 Mazda
2 Mazda RX-8
3 MAZDA
4 Mazda
5 Mazda
6 Mazda
7 Mazda
8 mazda
См. также в других словарях:
Mazda MX 5 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 1989 Klasse: Roadster Karosserieversionen: Cabriolet, zweitürig Vorgängermodell: keines Nachfolgemodell … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda — (Motor Corporation) Rechtsform Kabushiki gaisha (Aktiengesellschaft) ISIN JP3868400007 Gründung … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda 2 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 2003 Klasse: Kleinwagen Vorgängermodell: Mazda 121 Mazda Demio Nachfolgemodell: keines Der Mazda2 ist ein frontgetriebener … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda 3 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 2003 Klasse: Kompaktklasse Karosserieversionen: Stufenheck, viertürig Schrägheck, fünftürig Vorgängermodell … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda 5 — Mazda Mazda5 (2005–2008) 5 Hersteller: Mazda Motor Corporation Produktionszeitraum: seit 2005 … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda 6 — Mazda 6/Atenza Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 2002 Klasse: Mittelklasse Karosserieversionen: Stufenheck, viertürig Schrägheck, fünftürig Kombi, fünftürig … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda RX 8 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 2003 Klasse: Sportcoupé … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda MX-5 — Manufacturer Mazda Also called Mazda MX 5 Miata Mazda Miata Eunos Roadster Mazda Roadster Product … Wikipedia
Mazda RX-8 — Manufacturer Mazda Production 2003–2011[1] Assembly … Wikipedia
Mazda RX-7 — Manufacturer Mazda Production 1978–2002 811,634 produced[1] Assem … Wikipedia
Mazda MX-5 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 1989 Klasse: Roadster Karosserieversionen: Cabriolet, Stoffverdeck Vorgängermodell: keines Na … Deutsch Wikipedia
Источник
(Mazda)
1 мазда
См. также в других словарях:
Mazda MX 5 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 1989 Klasse: Roadster Karosserieversionen: Cabriolet, zweitürig Vorgängermodell: keines Nachfolgemodell … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda — (Motor Corporation) Rechtsform Kabushiki gaisha (Aktiengesellschaft) ISIN JP3868400007 Gründung … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda 2 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 2003 Klasse: Kleinwagen Vorgängermodell: Mazda 121 Mazda Demio Nachfolgemodell: keines Der Mazda2 ist ein frontgetriebener … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda 3 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 2003 Klasse: Kompaktklasse Karosserieversionen: Stufenheck, viertürig Schrägheck, fünftürig Vorgängermodell … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda 5 — Mazda Mazda5 (2005–2008) 5 Hersteller: Mazda Motor Corporation Produktionszeitraum: seit 2005 … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda 6 — Mazda 6/Atenza Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 2002 Klasse: Mittelklasse Karosserieversionen: Stufenheck, viertürig Schrägheck, fünftürig Kombi, fünftürig … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda RX 8 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 2003 Klasse: Sportcoupé … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda MX-5 — Manufacturer Mazda Also called Mazda MX 5 Miata Mazda Miata Eunos Roadster Mazda Roadster Product … Wikipedia
Mazda RX-8 — Manufacturer Mazda Production 2003–2011[1] Assembly … Wikipedia
Mazda RX-7 — Manufacturer Mazda Production 1978–2002 811,634 produced[1] Assem … Wikipedia
Mazda MX-5 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 1989 Klasse: Roadster Karosserieversionen: Cabriolet, Stoffverdeck Vorgängermodell: keines Na … Deutsch Wikipedia
Источник
mazda
1 мазда
См. также в других словарях:
Mazda MX 5 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 1989 Klasse: Roadster Karosserieversionen: Cabriolet, zweitürig Vorgängermodell: keines Nachfolgemodell … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda — (Motor Corporation) Rechtsform Kabushiki gaisha (Aktiengesellschaft) ISIN JP3868400007 Gründung … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda 2 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 2003 Klasse: Kleinwagen Vorgängermodell: Mazda 121 Mazda Demio Nachfolgemodell: keines Der Mazda2 ist ein frontgetriebener … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda 3 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 2003 Klasse: Kompaktklasse Karosserieversionen: Stufenheck, viertürig Schrägheck, fünftürig Vorgängermodell … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda 5 — Mazda Mazda5 (2005–2008) 5 Hersteller: Mazda Motor Corporation Produktionszeitraum: seit 2005 … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda 6 — Mazda 6/Atenza Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 2002 Klasse: Mittelklasse Karosserieversionen: Stufenheck, viertürig Schrägheck, fünftürig Kombi, fünftürig … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda RX 8 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 2003 Klasse: Sportcoupé … Deutsch Wikipedia
Mazda MX-5 — Manufacturer Mazda Also called Mazda MX 5 Miata Mazda Miata Eunos Roadster Mazda Roadster Product … Wikipedia
Mazda RX-8 — Manufacturer Mazda Production 2003–2011[1] Assembly … Wikipedia
Mazda RX-7 — Manufacturer Mazda Production 1978–2002 811,634 produced[1] Assem … Wikipedia
Mazda MX-5 — Hersteller: Mazda Produktionszeitraum: seit 1989 Klasse: Roadster Karosserieversionen: Cabriolet, Stoffverdeck Vorgängermodell: keines Na … Deutsch Wikipedia
Источник
Что такое мазафака
Часто нам приходится слышать в фильмах или песнях словосочетание мазафака, но немногие понимают, что на самом деле оно означает. Следует разобраться с данным вопросом.
Мазафака простыми словами — это нецензурное американское слово, означает половую связь с матерью. Иногда непосредственно не со своей мамой, а с женщиной, имеющей детей. Английское слово «mother» означает мама, а «fucker» это тот человек, который совершает половой акт с этой женщиной. Отсюда и появилось выражение мазерфака.
Важно! В России данное словосочетание несёт другую смысловую нагрузку и зачастую может истолковываться как замена выражению “Твою мать!”. Что по сути не так нецензурно и отвратительно звучит, как в американском сленге.
Но вернёмся к выражению мазафака, оно обычно употребляется, когда человек негодует, сильно рассержен и в голову, кроме мата больше ничего не приходит. Это выражение в США и Канаде употребляется очень часто.
Кто такой мазафакер?
От словосочетания мазафака происходит и мазафакер. Это выражение имеет два смысла. В первом случае это модное молодёжное движение. Во втором случае это слово означает человека, который имеет половой контакт с чей-то матерью. Например, подросток, который не может смириться с наличием отчима и не хочет называть его по имени, зовёт его мазерфакером, то есть тем, кто спит с его мамой.
Если говорить о молодёжном движении, то по сути это симпатичные и неагрессивные подростки, которые одеваются как рэперы, носят дреды, набивают татуировки, но не жалуют хиппи и геев. Они делают пирсинг по всему телу, ведут неразборчивый образ жизни и отличаются абсолютным пофигизмом. К слову сказать, женщин они любят всех наций и возрастов, главное условие, чтобы она была согласна на половой акт.
Как правильно пишется и произносится слово мазафака?
Правильно написать слово мазафака следует так — motherfaker. Произносится оно точно так же, как и читается в русском языке.
Источник
Что такое мазафака
Часто нам приходится слышать в фильмах или песнях словосочетание мазафака, но немногие понимают, что на самом деле оно означает. Следует разобраться с данным вопросом.
Мазафака простыми словами — это нецензурное американское слово, означает половую связь с матерью. Иногда непосредственно не со своей мамой, а с женщиной, имеющей детей. Английское слово «mother» означает мама, а «fucker» это тот человек, который совершает половой акт с этой женщиной. Отсюда и появилось выражение мазерфака.
Важно! В России данное словосочетание несёт другую смысловую нагрузку и зачастую может истолковываться как замена выражению “Твою мать!”. Что по сути не так нецензурно и отвратительно звучит, как в американском сленге.
Но вернёмся к выражению мазафака, оно обычно употребляется, когда человек негодует, сильно рассержен и в голову, кроме мата больше ничего не приходит. Это выражение в США и Канаде употребляется очень часто.
Кто такой мазафакер?
От словосочетания мазафака происходит и мазафакер. Это выражение имеет два смысла. В первом случае это модное молодёжное движение. Во втором случае это слово означает человека, который имеет половой контакт с чей-то матерью. Например, подросток, который не может смириться с наличием отчима и не хочет называть его по имени, зовёт его мазерфакером, то есть тем, кто спит с его мамой.
Если говорить о молодёжном движении, то по сути это симпатичные и неагрессивные подростки, которые одеваются как рэперы, носят дреды, набивают татуировки, но не жалуют хиппи и геев. Они делают пирсинг по всему телу, ведут неразборчивый образ жизни и отличаются абсолютным пофигизмом. К слову сказать, женщин они любят всех наций и возрастов, главное условие, чтобы она была согласна на половой акт.
Как правильно пишется и произносится слово мазафака?
Правильно написать слово мазафака следует так — motherfaker. Произносится оно точно так же, как и читается в русском языке.
Источник
Теперь вы знаете какие однокоренные слова подходят к слову Как пишется мазда на английском, а так же какой у него корень, приставка, суффикс и окончание. Вы можете дополнить список однокоренных слов к слову «Как пишется мазда на английском», предложив свой вариант в комментариях ниже, а также выразить свое несогласие проведенным с морфемным разбором.
На основании Вашего запроса эти примеры могут содержать грубую лексику.
На основании Вашего запроса эти примеры могут содержать разговорную лексику.
Mazda
Mazda3
Mazda6
MX-5
Mazda2
RX-8
В 1934 году появляется первый логотип MAZDA.
In 1934 appears for the first logo of Mazda.
MAZDA 323 имеется и в полноприводном варианте.
Mazda 323 is available also in all-wheel drive option.
Модели MAZDA 323 оснащаются также электронной системой впрыска топлива.
The MAZDA 323 models are equipped with also electronic system of injection of fuel.
Бензиновые модели MAZDA 323 могут быть оснащены регулируемым или нерегулируемым катализатором.
The petrol MAZDA 323 models can be equipped with the adjustable or unregulated catalyst.
Корпорации также принадлежит треть контрольно пакета акций концерна MAZDA.
Ford also owns a one-third controlling interest in Mazda.
Вынуть сопла вверх из капота, см. также иллюстрацию MAZDA 323 с 10/89 г. вып…
To take out nozzles up from a cowl, see also illustration MAZDA 323 from 10/89 g of the issue.
У нас вы можете найти все для тюнинга MAZDA.
We have everything you want at Chatham Mazda.
MAZDA MX-30 — экологичный электромобиль для водителя
Mazda MX-30 an electric car for the environment and the driver
Салон кроссовера по современной моде оснащен всем лучшим, что смог предложить производитель: алюминиевые вставки, высококачественные материалы, улучшенные кресла, светодиоды освещения и большой 8′ экран мультимедийной системы MAZDA CONNECT.
The cabin crossover to modern fashion equipped with everything the best I could offer the manufacturer: aluminum insert, high quality materials, improved seats, led lighting and a large 8′ screen multimedia system, MAZDA CONNECT.
Как и где купить дроссельная заслонка на MAZDA TRIBUTE?
How to replace water pump on Mazda tribute?
Не нашли Факельное устройство для MAZDA 626?
No thought on buying a reliable Mazda 626?
В зависимости от модели MAZDA 323 с 10/89г. вып. может быть оснащена антиблокировочной системой (ABS).
Depending on the Mazda 323 model from 10/89 g of the issue it can be equipped with anti-blocking system (ABS).
Не нашли Факельное устройство для MAZDA 626?
Do you drive an aging Mazda 626?
Заказ Такси в нашей Компании — это парк автомобилей состоящий в основном иномарки среднего класса такие, как AUDI 100, VW PASSAT, MERCEDES, MAZDA.
Taxi request in our Company — it’s a car park consisting mainly of European brand economy class cars like AUDI 100, VW PASSAT, MERCEDES, MAZDA.
В рамках ее реализации концерны NISSAN, RENAULT, FORD, VOLKSWAGEN, MAZDA выбрали поршневую «Мотордеталь» для двигателей, производимых на территории России.
As a part of its implementation the groups of companies such as NISSAN, RENAULT, FORD, VOLKSWAGEN and MAZDA have chosen the products of Motordetal for the engines produced in Russia.
Также он объявил о том, что MAZDA RX-VISION GT3 CONCEPT появится в чемпионате FIA GT Championships 2020 года.
He also announced that the MAZDA RX-VISION GT3 CONCEPT will appear in the FIA GT Championships 2020 Series.
Инженеры Mazda первоначально использовали уплотнения, идентичные старым.
Mazda engineers had originally used apex seals identical to the older design of seal.
Специалисты компании придумали концепцию и проектировали современный интерфейс соцсети Mazda.
Our experts came up with a concept and designed a modern interface of a social network for Mazda.
Новое поколение автомобилей Mazda повысит ценность обладания автомобилем.
This next generation of Mazda cars will enhance the value of the car-ownership proposition.
Корпорация Mazda распространила тизер дебютного серийного электрокара марки.
Mazda Corporation has distributed a teaser of the brand’s debut serial electric car.
Результатов: 4174. Точных совпадений: 4174. Затраченное время: 65 мс
Documents
Корпоративные решения
Спряжение
Синонимы
Корректор
Справка и о нас
Индекс слова: 1-300, 301-600, 601-900
Индекс выражения: 1-400, 401-800, 801-1200
Индекс фразы: 1-400, 401-800, 801-1200