Mazda Millenia
| Mazda Millenia | |
|---|---|
1998–2000 Mazda Millenia | |
| Overview | |
| Manufacturer | Mazda |
| Also called |
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| Production | 1993–2002 |
| Assembly | Japan: Hiroshima (Hiroshima Plant) |
| Designer | Yujiro Daikoku (1990) |
| Body and chassis | |
| Class | Executive car |
| Body style | 4-door sedan |
| Layout | Front-engine, front-wheel-drive |
| Platform | Mazda TA platform |
| Powertrain | |
| Engine |
|
| Power output |
|
| Transmission |
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| Dimensions | |
| Wheelbase | 2,751 mm (108.3 in) |
| Length |
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| Width | 1,770 mm (69.7 in) |
| Height | 1,394 mm (54.9 in) |
The Mazda Millenia (officially written as millenia) was an automobile manufactured by Mazda in Japan from 1993 to 2002. The Millenia was originally planned as one of the first models for Mazda's proposed luxury brand Amati.
As it was targeted at a more upscale market from typical Mazda customers, the Millenia was engineered to far greater levels of perceived quality than the more mainstream Mazda cars, such as improved interior plastic quality, smaller panel gaps and a thicker, more even paint coating, thanks to a novel process of painting the body while it rotated on a massive spindle. Mazda claimed this attention to detail was intended to set "standards for at least ten years".
At the time of its release, it was the first and only production car in the world to employ a Miller cycle engine, a design which Mazda would not use again until the second generation Mazda2 in 2008, and in modern Mazdas using the SKYACTIV engine.