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Test: 2007 Mazda CX-9
The modern alternative
By
Donna DeRosa, Managing Editor
Date posted: 03-21-2007
Driving friends to the airport at
the crack of dawn after a night of rain isn't exactly the ideal way to spend a
Sunday morning, but if you must be the airport shuttle, you could do worse than
to take the seven-seat 2007 Mazda CX-9.
Because after you drop off your lucky friends for their vacation in sunny
paradise, you get to heat up the road with 263 horsepower as you zoom zoom
the scenic route home.
Are you ready to rumble?
The prospect of hauling around seven people can be daunting, but the 2007 Mazda
CX-9 crossover SUV has a roomy third row with seats that can hold actual adults.
To be honest, the CX-9 is much more pleasant with only five people. But if you
want to fill it up, Mazda's third row is more than merely a glorified rumble
seat.
Mazda also tells us that the CX-9 has the largest pass-through to the third seat
you can find, thanks to the third row's 32.4 inches of legroom, a second row
that adjusts fore and aft by 5 inches for easy access, an easy-to-use latch that
lets you slide past the second row into the back, and the CX-9's long 113.2-inch
wheelbase.
Strong and smooth
For a big boy, the 4,284-pound Mazda CX-9 is surprisingly light on its feet.
It's like the Jackie Gleason of crossover vehicles. Despite his girth, our
favorite Honeymooner could skip the light fandango like nobody's business. And
even with seven seats and a length of almost 200 inches, the CX-9 doesn't feel
objectionably large or heavy on the road.
The Mazda CX-9's platform is related to that which lies beneath the
five-passenger
Ford Edge,
but the comparison ends there. The CX-9 has both high style and deliberate
athleticism, and the Ford Edge sadly wishes it had the exuberance and poise of
the Mazda.
Mazda says the CX-9's functional competitors are the eight-seat
Honda Pilot LX
and the seven-seat
Toyota Highlander
V6, yet it also wishes to invoke the passionate spirit of vehicles like the
turbocharged
Acura RDX.
Compared to the CX-9, the Pilot feels huge when you're behind the wheel, while
the smooth but stylistically tired Highlander has cramped access to the third
row. Meanwhile, the smaller RDX is bliss on wheels, offering both utility and
driving enjoyment. The CX-9 takes the best traits of all three and wraps them up
in one attractive package.
Creature features
We drove the front-wheel-drive CX-9 Sport, which is as basic as you can get in
the CX-9 lineup yet comes with a full allotment of standard features, including
a six-speed automatic transmission with manual shift mode, antilock brakes,
tilt-telescoping steering wheel with wheel-mounted cruise and audio controls,
and keyless entry.
Most important, the Sport model comes with smooth-riding 60-series tires on
18-inch wheels, which we've found is a far more road-friendly choice than the
optional 50-series tires on 20-inch wheels.
Our test vehicle's optional equipment includes an eight-way power-adjustable
driver seat, power moonroof and 10-speaker Bose audio system with an in-dash
six-disc CD player. For all-weather driving, an all-wheel-drive version of the
CX-9 is also available. There are swankier trim levels if you want to move up to
leather and wood interior trim, but the mechanical package remains unchanged.
Bang zoom
This minivan supplanter's double-overhead-cam, 3.5-liter V6 engine pumps out 263
hp at 6,250 rpm with 249 pound-feet of torque at 4,500 rpm.
This represents enough power to get this package to 60 mph in 7.7 seconds and
then clock through the quarter-mile in 16.2 seconds at 87.2 mph. The CX-9
features a Japanese-built transmission that works with a smoothness utterly
unlike that of the Ford Edge, changing gears crisply yet without any shift
shock. It also kicks down quickly when you put your foot down. With plenty of
gears, smooth shift action and fine throttle control, this transmission makes
the V6 seem more powerful than it really is.
The CX-9's braking performance is about average for this class. The four-wheel
discs stopped the 4,284-pound car from 60 mph in 136 feet, a stunning 20 feet
shorter than our
long-term 4,195-pound Ford Edge.
Apparently Mazda uses a more aggressive brake-pad material than the dull Edge
and it pays off. The brake pedal always feels reassuringly firm underfoot, yet
the effort level never makes braking a chore, even in stop-and-go traffic.
The CX-9's dynamic safety net includes stability control, just as it should in a
vehicle this size. The Mazda lets you have more fun than any of the other
three-row sport-utilities, but the electronics remind you that you don't want to
overdo it in a vehicle that makes it easy to forget it weighs more than 2 tons.
Even so, the CX-9 made it through our 600-foot slalom in 7.0 seconds at 58.8
mph.
Mazda has gone to some lengths to make the CX-9 fun to drive, and it shows in
its enthusiasm for the road. The carlike unibody feels torsionally rigid, and
the four-wheel independent suspension is tuned for sporting responses, with
minimal body roll and controlled ride motions. But the CX-9's stiff-legged
response to those speed bumps in the supermarket parking lot isn't very kind to
those sitting in the third row. And there's some road noise from the tires as
well.
The steering is surprisingly responsive and the effort is weighted just right. A
small, sporty steering wheel keeps you involved and adds to your hands-on
enjoyment. And the standard tilt-telescoping feature makes sure that both the
big and the small will feel comfortable behind the wheel.
In 'n out
The CX-9's long rear doors can be unmanageable in tight parking spots but
contribute to the easy access to the second- and third-row seats.
With all rows in place, luggage capacity is 17.2 cubic feet, but those cubes are
vertical, without much depth. Drop the 50/50-split third row, which you can
easily do with one hand, and you get 48.4 cubic feet. Once you fold both the
second- and third-row seats, cargo capacity expands to 100.7 cubic feet.
When it comes to interior storage, the CX-9 isn't lacking, but it isn't
exceptional. We wished the center console had the deep storage compartment that
you get in the smaller
CX-7.
We'll admit that Mazda is definitely going for a different audience here, not
the laptop-carrying crowd it seeks for the CX-7.
The CX-9 does have up-to-the-minute features like a hot power point in the
center storage area and an iPod jack. The power point in the center dash is not
hot when the car is switched off, but the one in the center console is, so you
can charge your phone or iPod when the car is parked.
People moving
So if you need the practicality of three rows but you just can't bring yourself
to drive a minivan or a truck-based sport-utility, then the 2007 Mazda CX-9
could be the perfect car for you.
Yes, we can't help but think of the CX-9 as a car. It performs all the duties of
a traditional seven-passenger minivan, only without the sliding doors and clumsy
handling. At the same time, it has an interior space that can be reconfigured
for people or cargo like a sport-utility, only without the terrible ride. And it
drives as easily and intuitively as a car. It's even priced like a car, as the
base price of our CX-9 Sport starts at $29,035 and it runs on regular fuel. The
Mazda CX-9 is the definition of what you want in a crossover vehicle.
And when you finally get some time alone in the CX-9, its light and nimble
personality is up to more spirited driving — you know, for when you want to kick
it in the rumble seat.