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Mazda Bongo
Manufacturer Mazda
Also called Mazda E-Series
Mazda Access
Ford Econovan
Production 1966-2001
Assembly Shah Alam, Selangor, Malaysia[1]
Class Van

The Mazda Bongo, also known as Mazda E-Series and Mazda Access, is a van manufactured by Japanese automaker Mazda from 1978 to 2001.

First generation (1966-1975)[]

Mazda-BONGO-1st-generation01

First generation Bongo

Mazda introduced its small van, the Bongo, in May 1966. It featured a 782 cc water-cooled OHV SA 4-stroke engine driving the rear wheels. The rear engined Bongo was produced in two versions from 1968, as the F800 was joined by the bigger engined F1000. Production ended in 1975, due to Mazda suffering serious economic troubles and upcoming stricter emissions regulations for 1976. This model retained the same body shape for its 10 year production life, the later models fitted with inertia-reel seat belts, and separate front parking indicator lights.

The rear engined Bongos had a full chassis (using the same Mazda 1000 engine as other variants mounted to a 4 speed transaxle at the rear) and were very strong and due to the low gearing, able to carry half a ton. Due to rust and poor maintenance, these Bongos are now few and far between. Exact numbers are not known, but a worldwide register [1] is currently being constructed to track all remaining examples.

The 1000 pickup and Bongo chassis are different, with common front suspension and brake components.

Second generation (1977-1983)[]

Mazda Bongo 201

Second generation Bongo

The next Bongo van appeared in September 1977. It was a mid-engine rear wheel drive vehicle. Ford sold this version of the van as the Ford Econovan, while Mazda sold it for export as the E1300, E1400, and E1600, depending on engine size.

Engines[]

  • 1978 1,272 cc TC, 60 hp (44 kW)
  • 1978-1982 1,586 cc NA, 80 hp (59 kW)
  • 1979-1980 1,415 cc UC, 70 hp (52 kW)


Third generation (1983-1999)[]

Mazda Bongo 301

Third generation Bongo

Ford J-Series van (J80)

The Bongo was redesigned for 1984 with new engines. It was also sold by Ford in Asia as the "Spectron". A new long-wheelbase version known as the Bongo Brawny was also introduced, three months before the regular Bongo. In export markets this model was again sold as the E-series.

Engines[]

Petrol

  • 1984-1985 1,415 cc UC
  • 1983-1988 1,789 cc F8
  • 1983-1988 2.0 cc FE

Diesel

Bongo Friendee (1995-2005)[]

1999 Mazda Bongo-Friendee 01

Mazda Bongo Friendee

Launched in 1995, they are usually (but not exclusively) available in automatic transmissions, and come in 2WD (SGL3) and 4WD (SGL5) versions. 2.5 turbo diesels are common in Japan, although there is a 2.5 V6 petrol version available.

Ford Freda 002

Ford Freda

The SG platform Bongo Friendee was introduced in 1995. Ford began selling the Friendee in the Japanese home market as the Ford Freda.

Mazda Bongo Friendee 005

Mazda Bongo Friendee with Auto Free Top

The Mazda Bongo Friendee van SGL, is an eight seater MPV. Some have had Mazda factory fitted kitchens installed within their car, but many others are imported and converted to camper vans in the UK. All of them have fold down seats downstairs to make a double bed, and on many models there is also an "Auto Free Top" elevating roof which 2 more people can sleep in. Flat-top versions are also available.

In June 1998, Mitsubishi Motors began reselling the Bongo. This was branded the Mitsubishi Access in some markets.

In 1999, a facelift version appeared with a revised bodystyle and different engines, although the 2.5 turbodiesel continues unchanged. Air conditioning, climate control and electronic blinds are fitted as standard.

Engines[]

Petrol

Diesel


Nissan version[]

From 1994 onwards, the Bongo was also sold by Nissan as the Vanette.

Trivia[]

  • A first generation Mazda Bongo was used in the movie Mad Max — it was the personal vehicle of director George Miller, who sacrificed his van to a crash scene to keep the budget low.
  • The Bongo's submodel Brawny and Friendee (and badge engineered Ford Freda) are commonly mentioned in websites as a joke concerning car model names.


References[]

Smallwikipedialogo This page uses some content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Mazda Bongo. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with Tractor & Construction Plant Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons by Attribution License and/or GNU Free Documentation License. Please check page history for when the original article was copied to Wikia


External links[]

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