Mazda 6 revealed in Takeri concept

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The Takeri's styling is already recognisable as a Mazda - following on from the Shinari concept car ...
Stuart Martin
Contributing Journalist
30 Nov 2011
3 min read

One of 52 world premieres at Tokyo motor show - 26 of them passenger cars - Mazda's next 6 sedan is still called the Takeri concept car for now but it is set to be one of the stars of this year's Tokyo Motor Show stand.

While the company is saying everything but "this is the new Mazda6," this is close to what it will look like when it replaces the current car, but that's not likely before the end of next year.

More likely to seat five than the concept car's four-seat set-up, the Takeri has the brand's Skyactiv-D 2.2-litre turbodiesel 129kW/420Nm 2.2-litre driving the front wheels, the "i-stop" start-stop system and regenerative braking system imaginatively entitled ‘i-ELOOP.’

The diesel is also teamed to a Skyactiv six-speed automatic, something the brand's current diesel passenger cars have been sorely missing in the automatic-addicted Australian market.

The concept car is 115mm longer than the current 6, with most of that increase injected into the wheelbase for improved cabin space; it's also 75mm wider and 10mm lower in overall height.

Mazda believes the turbodiesel medium passenger car will offer performance and fuel economy, with an expected cruising range as high as 1500km.

The car's start-top system re-starts without involving the battery and ignition system - by injecting fuel into the appropriate cylinder to re-start the engine.

Mazda also claims a first within the regenerative braking system - it uses a capacitor rather than only the conventional battery to store energy drawn from the brakes, using the energy to power the car's electric equipemtn (air conditioning, infotainment etc.)

The Takeri's styling is already recognisable as a Mazda - following on from the Shinari concept car and aiming to look like a coiled animal, ready to explode from standstill, according to the company designers.

Mazda design general manager Ikuo Maeda is aiming to create designs that produce an emotional response.

"There is no need for Mazda to build cars for people who are only concerned with style and trends. Whether working on sports cars or compact cars, I have always worked to create designs that evoke an emotional response in people," he says.

Maeda-san says future Mazda designs will move car buyers physically and emotionally unthe the design theme Kodo - soul of motion.

"My ultimate goal is to create a brand presence that car lovers around the world recognize as representing both Mazda originality and Japanese originality," he says.

Stuart Martin
Contributing Journalist
GoAutoMedia Stuart Martin started his legal driving life behind the wheel of a 1976 Jeep ragtop, which he still owns to this day, but his passion for wheeled things was inspired much earlier. Born into a family of car tinkerers and driving enthusiasts, he quickly settled into his DNA and was spotting cars or calling corners blindfolded from the backseat of his parents' car before he was out of junior primary. Playing with vehicles on his family's rural properties amplified the enthusiasm for driving and his period of schooling was always accompanied by part-time work around cars, filling with fuel, working on them or delivering pizzas in them. A career in journalism took an automotive turn at Sydney's Daily Telegraph in the early 1990s and Martin has not looked backed, covering motor shows and new model launches around the world ever since. Regular work and play has subsequently involved towing, off-roading, the school run and everything in between, with Martin now working freelance as a motoring journalist, contributing to several websites and publications including GoAuto - young enough for hybrid technology and old enough to remember carburettors, he’s happiest behind the wheel.
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