

Mazdaspeed’ing the Protege gained 30 horsepower thanks to its little turbo, with the output claim now totalling 170, with 160 accompanying ft-lb of torque. Mazda contracted Callaway Cars - a longstanding SoCal-based tuner known for making ultra high-HP Corvettes - to develop this car’s turbo system and it still sells replacement parts. And at this point, the Mazdaspeed name was actually starting to stand for something serious (the turbo Mazdaspeed Miata would be in the mix around this time as well).Īnd the development of the Mazdaspeed Protege was taken seriously. The Protege MP3 name didn’t last long everyone was up to speed in the ways of Napster and LimeWire by the time the Mazdaspeed Protege came out. Mazda needed to refine its formula for the street and make the Protege faster. The era in which it proudly placarded Mazdaspeed all over their marketing, campaigned the Protege in World Challenge and had a long, proud heritage of driving fun. Heck, a Mustang GT was hitting 0 to 60 in about six back then.Īgain, not bad, but this was the Zoom Zoom-era of Mazda. That’s not bad for a small-engined non-turbo car in 2001 it’s comparable to what a Honda Civic Si would have done at the time. That was enough to pull its 2,782 pounds to 60 mph in just over eight seconds. Thanks to a re-tuned ECU pinned into its 2.0-liter, FS-DE four-cylinder engine, it made 140 horsepower and 142 lb-ft of torque. It had the minerals in acceleration, too. You also feel the understeer, but it rotates the MP3’s rear satisfyingly when you back out of the throttle lightly, a trait that helped the car post a blazing 0.85 g on the skidpad.” “You feel the car’s organs working to digest corners. “From the thick steering wheel, ergonomically sculpted buckets, and machined-steel pedals, the Protegé MP3 streams data to your appendages regarding lateral grip, slip angle, and road irregularity” detailed car reviewer Aaron Robinson. The fun factor was very much there, according to Car and Driver.
