Mazda Not Quitting on Internal Combustion Yet

October 24 2022,

Mazda Not Quitting on Internal Combustion Yet

Just because the world is awash in the wave of EV love, it doesn’t mean that the internal-combustion engine (ICE) is dead – not by a long shot. All one has to do is look to Mazda, who not only has been refining their Skyactiv ICE engines for years – but are hard at work at developing two new ones.

Mazda has been sticking steadfastly by its SKYACTIV range of gas engine for a long time now, doing their best to refine every aspect of them so that even though they are gas-powered, efficiency remains job #1. Gas engines are still the most popular engines in North America today, so why should Mazda be ignoring those values customers? Put simply, they aren’t. What they are doing, is continuing to develop an EV platform that should be a mainstay in the line-up by 2035, but also new gas engines that are looking pretty darn spiffy.

The first is a 3.0-litre inline six-cylinder gas engine that, thanks to its being naturally-aspirated and helped along by a 48V mild hybrid system, is able to make strong, smooth power without the need for turbocharging which, in turn, means the engine should run to its full capacity using regular fuel.

Each cylinder makes 500 CC, which Mazda claims that is the best cylinder size to ensure the most bang for your buck due to the well-balanced physics and thermodynamics it allows for. This means it will be just as economic as a four-cylinder, as well as compact enough to mesh seamlessly with a new 8-speed transmission without hurting aerodynamics by sitting too high in the engine bay.

Joining the 3.0-litre six is another more traditional engine type, and this one’s perhaps the wild card of the two: a 3.3-litre “Skyactiv-D” diesel engine, also with 48V mild hybrid assistance. It’s an evolution of the smaller 2.2L unit last seen in the CX-5 crossover, and makes used of something called “egg-shaped combustion chambers”. According to Mazda, what that shaping does is allow the air-fuel mixture to divide into two different areas within the piston bowl. That means better combustion – always key when it comes to operating smoothy and efficiently – that leaves less unburned fuel residue sticking around.

Some say ICE is dead; Mazda says “long live the ICE!”


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