I am finally Mazda free.
I finally got rid of my wife’s Soul Red 2019 Mazda CX-5 GT Reserve. Last year, I sold my Sonic Silver 2019 CX-5 GTR to CarMax. Last Wednesday (24-Feb-2021), I traded my wife’s GTR for another brand smaller CUV. I am missing a few features but I can live without them.
Thank you all. Goodbye.
Thank you all. Goodbye.
I finally got rid of my wife’s Soul Red 2019 Mazda CX-5 GT Reserve. Last year, I sold my Sonic Silver 2019 CX-5 GTR to CarMax. Last Wednesday (24-Feb-2021), I traded my wife’s GTR for another brand smaller CUV. I am missing a few features but I can live without them.
Thank you all. Goodbye.
Thank you all. Goodbye.
I suspect he won't be posting any more. He had to have gotten killed on the deals. He had a 2017 CX-5 GT first, then traded to a 2019 GT and then to a 2019 GTR and bought a second one all within a year and now has sold both GTR's. Must love to waste money!
Last edited by chickdr19; Mar 1, 2021 at 02:03 PM.
My thoughts - as if anyone asked.
None of us are going to lose sleep about not getting an "explanation" as to why the OP sold his Mazdas, but I would think that whenever you make a post that will certainly raise more than a few questions, that common courtesy dictates that you "stick around" long enough to respond.
In this day and age as we can see splashed over the media on an increasing basis, common courtesy seems to have become all too uncommon.
Who knows, maybe the OP will prove us wrong and chime in?

None of us are going to lose sleep about not getting an "explanation" as to why the OP sold his Mazdas, but I would think that whenever you make a post that will certainly raise more than a few questions, that common courtesy dictates that you "stick around" long enough to respond.
In this day and age as we can see splashed over the media on an increasing basis, common courtesy seems to have become all too uncommon.
Who knows, maybe the OP will prove us wrong and chime in?
My thoughts - as if anyone asked.
None of us are going to lose sleep about not getting an "explanation" as to why the OP sold his Mazdas, but I would think that whenever you make a post that will certainly raise more than a few questions, that common courtesy dictates that you "stick around" long enough to respond.
In this day and age as we can see splashed over the media on an increasing basis, common courtesy seems to have become all too uncommon.
Who knows, maybe the OP will prove us wrong and chime in?

None of us are going to lose sleep about not getting an "explanation" as to why the OP sold his Mazdas, but I would think that whenever you make a post that will certainly raise more than a few questions, that common courtesy dictates that you "stick around" long enough to respond.
In this day and age as we can see splashed over the media on an increasing basis, common courtesy seems to have become all too uncommon.
Who knows, maybe the OP will prove us wrong and chime in?
As you said, common courtesy is VERY uncommon these days. Along with common sense. Both are uncommon in this day and age. Both go hand in hand.
I finally got rid of my wife’s Soul Red 2019 Mazda CX-5 GT Reserve. Last year, I sold my Sonic Silver 2019 CX-5 GTR to CarMax. Last Wednesday (24-Feb-2021), I traded my wife’s GTR for another brand smaller CUV. I am missing a few features but I can live without them.
Thank you all. Goodbye.
Thank you all. Goodbye.
Yes, the OP bought and sold three (yes, THREE) brand-new CX-5 over the last couple years. First, his complaint was about the cylinder-deactivation, then about the non-turbo engine performance. Don't know what the issues were afterwards with the two turbo CX-5 vehicles though (one was his and one was his wife's)?


