Mazda Sneakily Announces New Four-Cylinder Internal Combustion Engine Program

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

Many have wondered which direction Mazda would take with future powertrain development, as the automaker has talked about rotary range-extending engines, plug-in hybrids, and more. We’re now starting to get a clearer picture of how Mazda’s propulsion systems may look going forward, as it recently snuck some significant news into its latest financial report.


Mazda’s new four-cylinder engine is named Skyactiv-Z, a somewhat familiar title for enthusiasts. It will replace the automaker’s current Skyactiv line and will focus on lower emissions and improved efficiency.


The announcement noted that the new Skyactiv-Z will use “lambda 1 combustion,” which optimizes the air-fuel mixture for the best possible thermal efficiency. Mazda’s effort would place its engines on the level of those made by Porsche, which maintain a lamba of 1.00, otherwise known as the “perfect burn.”

Surprisingly, Mazda’s new engines will comply with the extremely strict Euro 7 emissions rules in Europe and Tier 4 requirements in the United States. The automaker’s approach differs from nearly all its competitors, most of which have pursued electrification to meet the tightening regulatory requirements.


That said, Mazda said it had learned lessons from developing its new inline-six powertrains, noting that the development efforts for the larger internal combustion engines would translate to the new four-cylinder. The company did not rule out electrification alongside its new combustion engine, so we could see some form of a hybrid or plug-in hybrid to boost its efficiency numbers.


[Images: Mazda]


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Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

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  • ToolGuy ToolGuy 4 days ago
    ICE technology is advancing at a rate which EV technology will never reach.
    • See 2 previous
    • Zerofoo Zerofoo 6 hours ago
      Batteries will never match the energy density of liquid fuels in my lifetime - and possibly not in my kid's lifetimes. Internal combustion will be with us for a very long time.
  • Kcflyer Kcflyer 4 days ago
    DI only in gas engines has already proven to be a recipe for gunky intake valves. Engines seem to become more complex and less reliable across all brands with each new level of government regulation. There is nothing green about disposable cars except the green lining of pockets....which is of course the primary goal of the green agenda.
    • Zerofoo Zerofoo 6 hours ago
      I suspect Direct Injection and Turbocharging is the easiest way to game EPA/CAFE requirements. In my experience, in the real world, old school throttle body injection (TBI) and Turbo/DI engines get roughly the same economy. What you drive and how you drive it makes all the difference.
  • Crtfour The rear ends on these electric IQs are hideous. No thanks. Now, time to get back to the Eldorado: Distinctly Luxurious article.
  • ToolGuy Doesn't matter, EVs don't work, even if they do I mean did they won't I mean wouldn't have the range to drive to the track. Plus the world is running out of electricity (and there is no way to make more). The panel gaps on EVs are aerodynamically problematic, especially Porsche. No one can afford EVs. There is no place (literally -no- place) to charge, and even if you do I mean could it will I mean would crash the U.S. electrical grid and there is no way to restart it, ever. Drivers will grow old and die waiting for the vehicle to charge. EV racing will never benefit the environment the way that ICE racing does and has and will. The batteries cost more than the vehicle and that cost goes up every minute. All electricity is dirty and nasty and not wholesome like petroleum. EVs are slow (as in the opposite of quick) and the point of a drag race is quick. I can't hear well because of ICE and what happens when a silent EV runs over me at the track? It is a good thing that the EV thing ended when it did and will never return. I for one am relieved.
  • MaintenanceCosts It at least looks more like a Cadillac and less like a Traverse than the XT6. I'm a shopper in this segment and would give it a test drive, which I wouldn't bother with for the XT6.
  • 1995 SC Early El Camino = coolLate El Camino = coolThis one = not cool
  • AZFelix A calendar search shows Saturday May 14th could have recently been in 2005, 2011, 2016, and 2022. The phone number now shows for Coys Wheel in Kaysville, UT.
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