Mazda designed the 626 for optimum interior space efficiency. The space devoted to mechanicals was minimized, while the room offered to passengers and cargo was maximized. Still, the 626 isn't quite as roomy as the Camry. The rear seat could use a tad more knee room, though there's plenty of shoulder space front and back.
There's plenty of in-cabin storage allowing motorists to stash everything from cassette tapes to handheld cellular phones. There's also a roomy back seat. It feels more comfortable than the back seats in most of the other cars in this class.
The trunk is spacious and can take up to 14.2 cubic feet of cargo. More important than a number, it is shaped well, a rectangular shape without obstructions. The trunk lid opens low so you won't have to lift high when hefting groceries or baggage. The rear seats fold down for additional cargo capacity or to carry longer items.
The front seats in the 626 are excellent. The buckets not only provide long-distance driving comfort but superb lateral support. You'll discover just how useful that is when you put the car through its paces. The rear seats are a little less satisfactory. We'd expect to be a bit stiff after a long trip, especially if we were stuck in the middle seat.
Overall, the interior design emphasizes quality, comfort and ergonomics. The 626 interior is attractive with a good choice of materials and an aesthetic sense of color balance.
The layout of the instrument panel makes the gauges easy to read. Controls and switches more located comfortably within reach. You won't have to take your eyes off the road to find the remote mirror controls or to turn on the rear defroster. Switches and knobs have a refined feel that bespeaks luxury.
The Camry and Accord may sport Toyota and Honda badges, but the Mazda 626 is a lot more fun to drive. This car has as personality. The driver can sense the road. It steers so precise, so exactly where you want it to go, that each corner on the route home becomes remarkable. Downshift into a lower gear and the V6 growls to life.
More is better when it comes to the drivetrain. Mazda's 2.0-liter 4-cylinder engine features twin-cams and 16 valves. It produces 125 horsepower at 5500 rpm and 127 foot-pounds of torque at 3000 rpm. It provides good performance and is rated by the EPA at 26 mpg City, 33 mpg Highway.
For an additional $1,400, however, you can move out of the LX and into the LX-V6. It comes with a smooth and gutsy 2.5-liter V6 that produces 170 horsepower and 163 foot-pounds of torque.
Those numbers may not sound like much compared to the new Accord V6, which delivers a full 200 horsepower, but as we've wisely learned over the years, raw numbers can be misleading. Our informal test suggests an impressive 0-to-60 mph acceleration time of around 7.5 seconds. That's fairly quick and more than enough to keep up with your friends in their Camrys and Accords. What they won't have is the 626's sweet exhaust note, which encourages you to keep your foot to the floor.
The suspension employs MacPherson struts up front and twin-trapezoidal links in the rear, plus big stabilizer bars at both ends. Steering is variable rate power-assisted rack-and-pinion. What you wind up with is the type of package that can absorb the little bumps on the everyday commute route, yet it just might make you wander the back roads looking for some tight corners to challenge.
Completing the performance picture is Mazda's crisp-shifting 5-speed manual transmission. In contrast to most other vehicles in this segment, Mazda makes the stick a standard feature on all 626 models. And with the V6, you'll find that traction control also comes standard. It's a useful compliment to the 626's front-wheel-drive powertrain, especially if you live in wet or snowy climes.
For those who'd prefer an automatic, Mazda has re-tuned its four-speed automatic to make it smoother and to reduce hunting between gears on uneven terrain.