Any CX-30 customers who would share their experience?
We have had ours since April and usually use it locally to drive to the parks for walks but took it from Dallas to Fort Worth today. It was smooth and quiet. We've loved every minute of it and I am always impressed by the interior and sound system. We had a silver CX-5 prior and my A4 is white so we are pretty conservative, but we decided to go for it this time and went for the Soul Red Crystal. We love it. When we park it on a hill and go for a walk we can see it literally glowing from a distance. It stands out from everything else in the parking lot. IMO especially the lines of the rear end of the car look great in that color.
I just got possession of my new CX-30 GT (in Canada) the other day. Beautiful car, can't rave about it enough. However, as I was making a 200km drive to see family for the week, I started hearing a high pitched whining noise coming from the engine area... As I kept driving, I noticed the sound was in tune with the transmission... Meaning, the pitch was proportional to the acceleration and shifting... And disappeared once I rev'd on Park or Neutral...
After researching online, many other Mazda3s and CX-5s have had this issue... There's even a technical service bulletin (TSB) describing it exactly:
https://www.tsbsearch.com/Mazda/05-002-19
For a brand new car to have this problem pretty much right off the lot (I'm at less than 400km/250miles) is massively disappointing and concerning to say the least. And yes, I did test the car before purchasing it, but did not hear anything. The noise actually starts after driving for a few minutes, and you need complete silence in the cabin. Once you do hear it, you can't "unhear" it anymore.
At least the chief mechanic at the dealer acknowledged the issue after he test drove it. But since there are no recalls nor TSBs for the CX-30, he's gonna have to talk to Mazda Canada, and see if they're willing to approve a fix. So, to be continued. Unbelievable, a brand new car...
After researching online, many other Mazda3s and CX-5s have had this issue... There's even a technical service bulletin (TSB) describing it exactly:
https://www.tsbsearch.com/Mazda/05-002-19
For a brand new car to have this problem pretty much right off the lot (I'm at less than 400km/250miles) is massively disappointing and concerning to say the least. And yes, I did test the car before purchasing it, but did not hear anything. The noise actually starts after driving for a few minutes, and you need complete silence in the cabin. Once you do hear it, you can't "unhear" it anymore.
At least the chief mechanic at the dealer acknowledged the issue after he test drove it. But since there are no recalls nor TSBs for the CX-30, he's gonna have to talk to Mazda Canada, and see if they're willing to approve a fix. So, to be continued. Unbelievable, a brand new car...
I just got possession of my new CX-30 GT (in Canada) the other day. Beautiful car, can't rave about it enanymore.
At least the chief mechanic at the dealer acknowledged the issue after he test drove it. But since there are no recalls nor TSBs for the CX-30, he's gonna have to talk to Mazda Canada, and see if they're willing to approve a fix. So, to be continued. Unbelievable, a brand new car...
At least the chief mechanic at the dealer acknowledged the issue after he test drove it. But since there are no recalls nor TSBs for the CX-30, he's gonna have to talk to Mazda Canada, and see if they're willing to approve a fix. So, to be continued. Unbelievable, a brand new car...
I just got possession of my new CX-30 GT (in Canada) the other day. Beautiful car, can't rave about it enough. However, as I was making a 200km drive to see family for the week, I started hearing a high pitched whining noise coming from the engine area... As I kept driving, I noticed the sound was in tune with the transmission... Meaning, the pitch was proportional to the acceleration and shifting... And disappeared once I rev'd on Park or Neutral...
After researching online, many other Mazda3s and CX-5s have had this issue... There's even a technical service bulletin (TSB) describing it exactly:
https://www.tsbsearch.com/Mazda/05-002-19
For a brand new car to have this problem pretty much right off the lot (I'm at less than 400km/250miles) is massively disappointing and concerning to say the least. And yes, I did test the car before purchasing it, but did not hear anything. The noise actually starts after driving for a few minutes, and you need complete silence in the cabin. Once you do hear it, you can't "unhear" it anymore.
At least the chief mechanic at the dealer acknowledged the issue after he test drove it. But since there are no recalls nor TSBs for the CX-30, he's gonna have to talk to Mazda Canada, and see if they're willing to approve a fix. So, to be continued. Unbelievable, a brand new car...
After researching online, many other Mazda3s and CX-5s have had this issue... There's even a technical service bulletin (TSB) describing it exactly:
https://www.tsbsearch.com/Mazda/05-002-19
For a brand new car to have this problem pretty much right off the lot (I'm at less than 400km/250miles) is massively disappointing and concerning to say the least. And yes, I did test the car before purchasing it, but did not hear anything. The noise actually starts after driving for a few minutes, and you need complete silence in the cabin. Once you do hear it, you can't "unhear" it anymore.
At least the chief mechanic at the dealer acknowledged the issue after he test drove it. But since there are no recalls nor TSBs for the CX-30, he's gonna have to talk to Mazda Canada, and see if they're willing to approve a fix. So, to be continued. Unbelievable, a brand new car...
Almost 7,000 miles on mine. Great car. No complaints other than a faint rattle sound coming from driver's side front wheel area. Possibly strut. Going to dealer tomorrow and taking a tech for a ride to show him. It's driving me nuts.
Thanks, dealer seemed willing to get it fixed. I just don't know if Mazda Corporate will be as eager. I hope you're right. Again, the problem with a new model like the CX-30 is it doesn't have a technical history to base the repairs on. I'm afraid they'll tell me "you're the only who has this issue, we'll have to wait to see if others have it also, then we'll make a decision", and play me around for a while. I can't stress how frustrating it's been buying a car at this price and having this issue right off the lot. But I'm staying positive.
The TSB is 1-1/2 years old and a re-issue of previous TSBs. My guess is, it might be updated to cover additional years/models. Although, replace the transmission is the correction, you'd think that after 3/19 there wouldn't be any bad transmissions in stock.
I had a NC Miata with manual transmission that was very notchy to shift. I changed the transmission oil myself, to Redline synthetic, and the problem went away. Probably many other synthetic brands of oil might have had the same result. It appears, by a fast search, that there are synthetic ATF FZ fluid brands out there. Maybe change the fluid, might help. probably can't hurt.
I had a NC Miata with manual transmission that was very notchy to shift. I changed the transmission oil myself, to Redline synthetic, and the problem went away. Probably many other synthetic brands of oil might have had the same result. It appears, by a fast search, that there are synthetic ATF FZ fluid brands out there. Maybe change the fluid, might help. probably can't hurt.
I just got possession of my new CX-30 GT (in Canada) the other day. Beautiful car, can't rave about it enough. However, as I was making a 200km drive to see family for the week, I started hearing a high pitched whining noise coming from the engine area... As I kept driving, I noticed the sound was in tune with the transmission... Meaning, the pitch was proportional to the acceleration and shifting... And disappeared once I rev'd on Park or Neutral...
After researching online, many other Mazda3s and CX-5s have had this issue... There's even a technical service bulletin (TSB) describing it exactly:
https://www.tsbsearch.com/Mazda/05-002-19
For a brand new car to have this problem pretty much right off the lot (I'm at less than 400km/250miles) is massively disappointing and concerning to say the least. And yes, I did test the car before purchasing it, but did not hear anything. The noise actually starts after driving for a few minutes, and you need complete silence in the cabin. Once you do hear it, you can't "unhear" it anymore.
At least the chief mechanic at the dealer acknowledged the issue after he test drove it. But since there are no recalls nor TSBs for the CX-30, he's gonna have to talk to Mazda Canada, and see if they're willing to approve a fix. So, to be continued. Unbelievable, a brand new car...
After researching online, many other Mazda3s and CX-5s have had this issue... There's even a technical service bulletin (TSB) describing it exactly:
https://www.tsbsearch.com/Mazda/05-002-19
For a brand new car to have this problem pretty much right off the lot (I'm at less than 400km/250miles) is massively disappointing and concerning to say the least. And yes, I did test the car before purchasing it, but did not hear anything. The noise actually starts after driving for a few minutes, and you need complete silence in the cabin. Once you do hear it, you can't "unhear" it anymore.
At least the chief mechanic at the dealer acknowledged the issue after he test drove it. But since there are no recalls nor TSBs for the CX-30, he's gonna have to talk to Mazda Canada, and see if they're willing to approve a fix. So, to be continued. Unbelievable, a brand new car...
I know my case is rare as the CX-30 is still new, but I can't understand how this is acceptable by a company like Mazda. How can I remain confident as an owner?
I updated my other thread also. So the dealer confirmed my brand new CX-30 has a faulty transmission. Either it was defective to begin with, or it was badly assembled and broke as soon as it hit the road, it could be either says the chief mechanic. Mazda Corporate decided it'll take too long to identify the underlying issue, so they're simply ordering a new transmission.
I know my case is rare as the CX-30 is still new, but I can't understand how this is acceptable by a company like Mazda. How can I remain confident as an owner?
I know my case is rare as the CX-30 is still new, but I can't understand how this is acceptable by a company like Mazda. How can I remain confident as an owner?


