BY STEVEN BUTCHER | 14th Feb 2001


THERE was no concept revision with the new MX-5 - the car remains faithful to its simple, compact, curvaceous styling of years past. Of course the purists were outraged when the pop-up headlights were replaced by fixed surface lamp clusters, each of which saves 5.6kg. But this is a lighter, tauter and, some might argue, purer MX-5 than ever. The fundamental principle guiding the design and engineering team was value and assert the car's inherent "soul" and strengthen and refine the "body". As before, a heavily sculpted front bumper flows neatly onto the bonnet and lower flanks, and a striking ridge is formed underneath the headlights. The gaping mouth grille has been retained, as have the circular brake lights, although the light cluster has been modernised. The chrome Alfa-style doorhandles were replaced by more practical, flush-mounted and body-coloured flaps. The rear deck rises onto a central hump, integrating a high-mounted stoplight. Aerodynamics improved from 0.39 to 0.36Cd.
Full Site
Back to Top

Main site

Researching

GoAutoMedia