EDIT: I could have saved myself a lot of typing if I had just read the last two pages where other people already make most of my points. So, alfa, you don't really need to read this
alfadriver wrote:
In reply to irish44j:
I am honestly confused by your point. Why? Because you indicate that the Toyota/Subaru car would be significanly more usable. But it's barely any bigger. Granted it has seats beind the driver- but other than some nominal stuff, what can you realistically put there? Can you really carry all the stuff that is on your requirement list?
Again, it's because of the shape of the space. Yes, we can all agree that you can but larger things in a vert with the top down or with no passenger. And that the Miata's trunk can fit a golf bag or two, maybe even with the spare tire in there. But let's use the concrete bags as an example (I make it because I picked up 5 bags in the WRX the other week on the way home from work): In a hatchback, it's not hard to put them "in the back seat..." because the back seat probably folds down, so you just slide them through from the back hatch. Or put a few 6' 2x4s in the back area and between the front seats. The main problem with the Miata is the lack of pass-through from trunk to interior (obviously because the top has to have a place to fold down). So while there is certainly room for the same overall amount of "stuff" as a hatchback, you're limited as to the shape/size of the stuff. Much like older WRX's without the fold-down rear seats were way less useful than the new ones where the seats fold down, for carrying long/bulky items.
I can't put a bass guitar in a Miata if my drummer is riding shotgun. I can put a bass guitar in a BRZ if my drummer is riding shotgun, though.
And even so, the nominal Miata is a 2 seat convertable. Why do people think that the car should be a more usable car?
Well gee, why even have a trunk at all? We could all drive around Ariel Atoms since small cars need not have any practicality, right?. To answer the question: because not everyone wants to (or can afford to) have a bunch of different cars for different things. I'd like a small sporty car that has some practicality for my own uses.
It is what it is
ok, I'll quote this for future reference use any time I ever see you post something you don't like about any car. Yeah, it is what it is for sure. And this is the internet, so I can wish that there was a fastback Miata, or that the BRZ was turbo, or that all cars had a stick shift, or that BMW never invented i-drive, or whatever I wish to wish for, lol.
- not some kind utility car, it's a small car for small things carrying small stuff. And every single Miata since 1989 has been like that. For a car that is the highest selling 2 seat roadster of all time, why would ANYONE expect the car to deviate from that model? I really don't understand that expectation.
Just to be clear, I have no actual expectation that Mazda would or will make a coupe Miata. But again, that doesn't mean I can't wish that they did. I find it hard to believe that you've never seen a particular car and said "man, that car would be great and I'd buy one, if only it had......"
For me, what you ask of a car, the Subaru/Toyota car would not be anywhere near my choice, either. If I needed to move 5 50lb bags of concrete, there's no way I would dream of putting them in the back seat. Putting one back there would be beyond painful.
You should probably work on your core strength, then
Then again, I once moved a sleeper sofa 10 miles by strapping it to the bike racks on the roof of my Maxima. So maybe I have strange expectations of what a car should be able to do.
That does bring up another point that a fastback Miata could put a ski rack or cargo box on a roof rack for even more utility
I can see the desire to have a coupe. A nice sport coupe. But it does not take much work to understand that a sporty coupe market isn't very big. And some of that sporty coupe market just wants a sporty car. And by taking the top off the car, you just added the group of people who want a small convertable. That market is big enough to persue. None of that market is going to be capable of running a plant by itself, so the point is to have enough of it to be sustainable and money making.
Yet somehow manufacturers do it all the time. Hell, Nissan took a Murano and made a convertible out of it. Is it profitable? I have no idea. But I bet Mazda would sell far more Miata coupes than Nissan sells Murano Convertibles (or Toyota sold Solaras, or whatever). To take a sedan and make it a vert, a lot of structural reinforcement needs to be done. To take a vert and make it hardtop, from an engineering point of view, seems to me to be a more straightforward task.
Would it be profitable or not? I doubt either of us can realistically say. But when I'm on the web wishing for "my" car that isn't going to be built, I'm not terribly concerned with manufacturer profits.
I would argue that the market is there, as can be seen by the Toyobaru twins. If the Miata is the ultimate car as most on here say it is, then a Miata Coupe would be superior to the Frisbees.
I personally think that the reason the Miata has never been made into a fastback is that it would have destroyed the sales of the RX-7 among the general driving populace (though there would always be the motorsports types who love their rotaries...)
Still, the Miata/MX5 has sold more than any other attempt in that market. Why change it? I think the risk of losing you as a customer is worth getting two others who are happy. IMHO.
I'm not sure why you think of it as an "either-or."
I think you're under the impression that I'm advocating getting rid of the convertible Miata. I'm not advocating "making the Miata a fastback." I'm advocating making "a fastback version." So I don't see how that would affect people who want a convertible Miata, since it would still be available. The same number of vert buyers will buy a Miata convertible regardless. But you add a market (small or large) who doesn't want a vert, and add them to the vert sales. Hell, charge a premium for the fastback version if you want to. I'll pay a few $k more for a Miata with a fastback, personally.
How many BRZ or FRS buyers would have bought a fastback Miata instead if it were available? I don't know, but I'd be willing to bet some of them would.
It's all academic, of course. But if we can't "wish for" things on cars that we personally want, then car discussions would be pretty damn boring.