1995 Mazda 626 Interior Review at Automotive.com
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1995 Mazda 626 Review: Interior

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1995 Mazda 626 Review

A winner with genuine quality and consistency
Interior
All 626s share a stylish and roomy interior. They're capable of carrying five adults in reasonable comfort, but for maximum luxury you should keep the occupants to four or fewer.

Dual airbags and height-adjustable front seat-belt anchors are standard regardless of model, as are well-shaped front bucket seats.

The rear seat has a 60/40 split that allows one side of the seatback to be folded, increasing luggage space while still accommodating a passenger.

In all 626s, a tilt steering wheel and inside releases for the trunk and fuel-filler door are supplied.

Upgrade models build on this satisfactory basic cabin layout. Air conditioning is standard on all models except the DX, which gets air as part of a convenience package that also adds an AM/FM/cassette stereo and carpeted floormats.

Also standard on the LX, LX-V6 and ES models are cruise control and power windows/door locks. Cloth upholstery (DX) can be replaced by velour (LX and LX-V6) or leather (ES). Power front-seat adjustments are standard on the ES, but even lesser models' front seats have a wide range of adjustability, and the manual controls are simple to use.

Despite the high amenity count, the 626 interior is simple yet functional, stylish without being ornate.

The only complex item is the optional sound system, a 6-speaker unit (with dealer-installed CD changer) that has an inordinate number of small push buttons to deal with. That's not an unusual feature, but is nonetheless a distraction to the driver. Next Page



1995 Mazda 626