2001 Mazda Tribute Interior Review at Automotive.com
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2001 Mazda Tribute Review: Interior

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2001 Mazda Tribute Review

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Interior
The Tribute offers seating for five. In fact, the Tribute offers more front and rear legroom than the Lexus RX 300 luxury SUV. It's more comfortable with four people, however, and no shoulder belt is provided for the rear center position. The front bucket seats and the rear bench seat are comfortable and of higher quality than what's found in many SUVs. Like many smaller SUVs, the rear windows do not roll down all the way.

The second-row seat folds down revealing a flat cargo floor and more than 74 cubic feet of cargo space. It will even accommodate 4x8-foot sheets of plywood, if you don't mind flipping open the rear glass hatch and letting the plywood stick out the back. The lift gate window does not have to be closed before opening the rear hatch. A 12-volt power outlet is located in the rear of the cargo compartment.

Radio controls are easy to use with big volume and tuning knobs and the heating, air conditioning and ventilation controls are simple. Cruise controls are mounted on the steering wheel. The instrument panel is straightforward and easy to read. Noise, vibration and harshness levels are low when underway. Visibility in all directions is very good. The shape of the Tribute's hood and the seating position allow the driver to clearly see both front corners of the vehicle, an advantage over the Honda CR-V, while narrow A- (front) and D- (rear) pillars minimize blind spots. A low bottom edge maximizes visibility out the rear window and there's no spare tire to block the view.

Leather seating surfaces and a six-way power driver's seat are standard on the ES model. An available 190-watt AM/FM/cassette/six-disc in-dash CD ($505) stereo with six speakers and a subwoofer delivers excellent sound system for LX and ES models. Next Page



2001 Mazda Tribute
  
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