Buyer's guide

15 min read

Mazda Autozam AZ-1 PG6SA

Buyer's guide & specs

Production
1992-1994
Market range
$18K–$60K
Engine
F6A
0.657L
Mazda Autozam AZ-1 — front three-quarter view
Mazda Autozam AZ-1 — the only kei sports car sold with factory gullwing doors.

Background

Overview

The PG6SA Autozam AZ-1 is the only chassis code Mazda used for the model: a single-generation mid-engine kei coupe produced from October 1992 to October 1995. The drivetrain is Suzuki's F6A 657 cc turbocharged three-cylinder, transversely mounted ahead of the rear axle, driving the rear wheels through a five-speed manual gearbox. There was no automatic option. Curb weight is approximately 720 kg, the body uses plastic composite panels bolted to a steel monocoque, and the gullwing doors hinge from a roof rail braced by the cant rails — a structural arrangement that limits roof flex and is the reason the AZ-1 has no factory convertible variant.

Two factory sub-variants matter to collectors: the Mazdaspeed-equipped car (redesigned hood, rear wing, ceramic muffler, optional strut bars, optional mechanical LSD) and the M2 1015 (50 units announced in 1994, fog lights integrated into the bonnet, restyled front bumper, three colors — white, black, silver — and only about half the announced run actually sold; M2 broke up the unsold cars for parts). The M2 1014 was a single Tokyo Motor Show one-off and is not a buyable variant. The Suzuki Cara (chassis PG6SS) shares the AZ-1's body, drivetrain and subframe with cosmetic changes — different grille, factory fog lights, Suzuki badges — and was produced from 1993 to 1995 in much smaller numbers (around 530 units cited in Wikipedia).

Browse JDM Autozam AZ-1 PG6SA listings for sale

Chassis Code Explained

P Platform
G6 Engine code
SA Body/variant
Segment Meaning Detail
P Platform P-series Suzuki-derived kei sports platform
G6 Engine code Suzuki F6A 657cc turbocharged three-cylinder
SA Body/variant SA — rear-wheel-drive mid-engine sports configuration

The PG6SA is the sole production chassis for the Autozam AZ-1; the near-identical Suzuki Cara used the same platform under a separate Suzuki chassis code. Approximately 4,400 units were produced 1992–1995.

Editorial notes

Key Takeaways

The AZ-1 only had one chassis, the PG6SA, built from October 1992 to October 1995. What changed across the run wasn't the platform, it was the sub-variants. Mazdaspeed-equipped AZ-1s got factory aero and sport parts, the limited M2 1015 added fog lights in the bonnet, and the Suzuki Cara was the badge-engineered AZ-1 sold through Suzuki dealers.

  • Mid-engine kei with gullwing doors; true collectible
  • Originality drives value; mods often reduce price
  • Rust and accident repairs are the biggest risks
  • Parts scarcity raises ownership cost and downtime
  • Import demand keeps prices firm despite cycles
  • Low miles help, but condition/history matter more

Technical Specifications

Every AZ-1 runs the same drivetrain. The F6A 657cc turbocharged three-cylinder makes the kei-limit 64 PS, sends power through a 5-speed manual, and drives the rear wheels. There was no automatic option and no other engine option on the AZ-1.

Engine Options

ChassisEngineDisplacementPower — JDMNotes
PG6SAF6A0.657L64 PS @ 6500rpm (estimated)Kei limit output; intercooled turbo (est.)
PG6SAF6A0.657L63 hp @ 6500rpm (estimated)Alt unit conversion; same JIS rating (est.)

Transmission Options

Type Ratios Availability Notes
5-speed Manual 3.416/2.045/1.333/1.000/0.795 All AZ-1 trims Ratios estimated; factory 5MT only
Final drive 4.300 All AZ-1 trims Estimated final drive

Livability

Headroom
36.0"
Helmet fit is tight; tall drivers hit roof/door
Rear Seats
None
Two-seat only; no occasional rear perch
Cargo
3.5 cu ft
Tiny frunk + behind seats; weekend bag max

Variants & Trims

The AZ-1 came in a base trim plus the Mazdaspeed package and the limited M2 1015 special edition. The Suzuki Cara is the badge-engineered sibling, mechanically identical with a different nose. The trim levels listed as Type A through Type L cover equipment packages and option content rather than mechanical differences.

Generation Trim Engine Key Features
PG6SA (1992-1994) Autozam AZ-1 (Std) F6A 657cc I3 Turbo (DOHC 12V) Gullwing doors, mid-engine RWD, 5MT, alloy wheels
PG6SA (1992-1994) Autozam AZ-1 (L) F6A 657cc I3 Turbo (DOHC 12V) Std + added comfort trim, audio, interior upgrades
PG6SA (1992-1994) Autozam AZ-1 (M2 1015) F6A 657cc I3 Turbo (DOHC 12V) M2-tuned parts, unique trim, limited-run equipment
PG6SA (1992-1994) Autozam AZ-1 Mazdaspeed F6A 657cc I3 Turbo (DOHC 12V) Mazdaspeed aero, wheels, sport parts, limited
PG6SA (1992-1994) Autozam AZ-1 (Type A) F6A 657cc I3 Turbo (DOHC 12V) Std equipment package, 5MT, midship layout
PG6SA (1992-1994) Autozam AZ-1 (Type B) F6A 657cc I3 Turbo (DOHC 12V) Equipment package variant, interior/option differences
PG6SA (1992-1994) Autozam AZ-1 (Type C) F6A 657cc I3 Turbo (DOHC 12V) Equipment package variant, option content differences
PG6SA (1992-1994) Autozam AZ-1 (Type D) F6A 657cc I3 Turbo (DOHC 12V) Equipment package variant, option content differences
PG6SA (1992-1994) Autozam AZ-1 (Type E) F6A 657cc I3 Turbo (DOHC 12V) Equipment package variant, option content differences
PG6SA (1992-1994) Autozam AZ-1 (Type F) F6A 657cc I3 Turbo (DOHC 12V) Equipment package variant, option content differences
PG6SA (1992-1994) Autozam AZ-1 (Type G) F6A 657cc I3 Turbo (DOHC 12V) Equipment package variant, option content differences
PG6SA (1992-1994) Autozam AZ-1 (Type H) F6A 657cc I3 Turbo (DOHC 12V) Equipment package variant, option content differences
PG6SA (1992-1994) Autozam AZ-1 (Type I) F6A 657cc I3 Turbo (DOHC 12V) Equipment package variant, option content differences
PG6SA (1992-1994) Autozam AZ-1 (Type J) F6A 657cc I3 Turbo (DOHC 12V) Equipment package variant, option content differences
PG6SA (1992-1994) Autozam AZ-1 (Type K) F6A 657cc I3 Turbo (DOHC 12V) Equipment package variant, option content differences
PG6SA (1992-1994) Autozam AZ-1 (Type L) F6A 657cc I3 Turbo (DOHC 12V) Equipment package variant, option content differences

Should You Buy a Mazda Autozam AZ-1 PG6SA?

The AZ-1 trades practicality for theater. You get gullwing doors, a mid-engine kei layout that doesn't exist anywhere else, and a car that feels like a scaled-down supercar. You give up cabin space, parts availability, and any pretense of usability on a long drive.

Why You'll Love It

  • True mid-engine balance MR layout delivers kart-like turn-in and rotation; unique among kei cars.
  • Gullwing-door theater Iconic doors and canopy styling create supercar vibes at kei scale.
  • Strong collector demand Limited supply and global JDM interest keep liquidity high for clean cars.
  • Lightweight performance feel Modest power feels lively due to ~720 kg curb weight and short gearing.
  • Simple, analog driving No driver aids; direct steering and pedals reward skilled inputs.
  • Kei running costs (some) Small tires and basic consumables can be affordable vs larger sports cars.
  • Community knowledge base Enthusiast forums and importers document common fixes and parts sources.

Why You Might Not

  • Rust is common and costly Sills, floors, rear subframe areas; repairs are labor-heavy and value-killing.
  • Parts scarcity and delays Trim, glass, door hardware, and interior bits can be hard to source.
  • Heat management challenges Mid-engine bay runs hot; cooling system health is critical in traffic.
  • Tiny cabin and entry/exit Tall/broad drivers struggle; gullwings need space and good struts.
  • Turbo F6A needs care Boost leaks, aging hoses, and oiling neglect can shorten turbo/engine life.
  • Accident history is frequent Many were driven hard; check chassis alignment and repaired fiberglass panels.
  • Modifications can hurt value Non-original wheels, aero, swaps reduce collector appeal unless period-correct.
  • Highway comfort is limited Short wheelbase, noise, and gearing make long trips tiring.

Who Should NOT Buy This

  • Drivers over 6'1" or broad-shouldered
  • Anyone needing rear seats or child-seat capability
  • People without indoor storage (leaks/rust risk)
  • Owners who can't wrench or lack kei specialists
  • Anyone expecting modern crash safety
  • Daily commuters in heavy traffic or hot climates
  • Buyers needing easy parts availability locally
  • People who hate squeaks, rattles, and cabin noise
  • Those wanting strong A/C and quick defogging
  • Drivers who park in low garages (gullwing clearance)
  • Anyone on a tight budget for surprise repairs
  • Track-day users unwilling to upgrade cooling
  • Buyers who require automatic transmission
  • People who need highway passing power at low RPM
  • Rust-belt residents without rust-proofing plans
  • Anyone needing high ground clearance
  • Owners who can't tolerate frequent maintenance
  • People expecting dealership-level diagnostics/support
  • Those who must pass strict emissions inspections
  • Anyone uncomfortable with right-hand drive

Common Issues & Solutions

The AZ-1 isn't unreliable, but it is old, complex, and built in tiny numbers. Most of the trouble traces back to rust, cooling, or aging turbo plumbing. None of these are surprising on a 30-year-old turbocharged kei car, but they all cost more to fix on an AZ-1 because parts are scarce.

Issue Cause Solution Est. Cost
Overheating in traffic Weak fans, clogged rad, air pockets, old hoses New rad, fans/relays, bleed properly, replace hoses $400-1200
Head gasket failure Overheating, detonation from lean boost, old coolant MLS gasket, head skim, studs, fix cooling/AFR $1200-2500
Turbocharger oil smoke Worn seals/bearings, coked oil from heat soak Rebuild/replace turbo; add proper cooldown habits $600-1600
Boost leaks / low boost Aged couplers, cracked hoses, loose clamps Pressure test; replace hoses/couplers; proper clamps $150-600
Detonation under boost Heat soak, bad fuel, overboost, weak ignition Lower boost, fix IC fan/ducting, plugs/coils, tune $200-1500
Intercooler fan failure Dead motor, relay, wiring corrosion, broken switch Replace fan/relay; clean grounds; verify temp trigger $150-500
Timing belt overdue Age neglect; low-mile imports still time out Belt, tensioner, idlers, water pump, seals $500-1200
Water pump leak/noise Old pump bearings/seal; contaminated coolant Replace pump with timing service; flush coolant $450-1100
Oil leaks (top end) Hardened cam cover gasket, PCV issues Gasket/half-moons; service PCV; clean breathers $150-450
Rear main seal leak Age, crankcase pressure, worn seal lip Seal replacement during clutch; fix PCV $700-1400
Low oil pressure hot Worn bearings/pump; thin oil; overheating history Gauge verify; rebuild bottom end if confirmed $2500-6000
2nd/3rd gear synchro grind Worn synchros from hard shifts/old oil Rebuild trans; quality gear oil; replace worn hubs $1200-2500
Clutch slip Worn disc, oil contamination, higher boost Clutch kit; resurface flywheel; fix oil leaks $700-1500
Clutch master/slave leak Aged seals; moisture-contaminated fluid Replace master/slave; flush with fresh DOT4 $200-500
CV boot tears / clicking Age, heat, lowered suspension angles Reboot or replace axle; align ride height $200-700
Wheel bearing noise Age, water ingress, track heat Replace hub/bearing; inspect knuckle wear $250-700
Brake caliper seizure Corrosion, old fluid, torn dust boots Rebuild/replace calipers; flush fluid; new hoses $300-900
Brake hard line rust Road salt; trapped moisture under clips Replace lines; inspect all unions; undercoat properly $400-1200
Steering rack leak/play Torn boots, seal wear, contamination Rebuild/replace rack; new boots; align $600-1400
Rear subframe corrosion Salt exposure; thin factory coating Replace/repair subframe; treat and cavity wax $800-2500
Floor/sill rust perforation Water ingress from doors; trapped moisture Cut/weld metal; fix seals/drains; rust-proof $1500-6000
Gullwing door sag Hinge wear, cracked mounts, weak struts Rebuild hinges/mounts; replace struts; align doors $400-2000
Door water leaks Flattened seals, misalignment, blocked drains New seals; adjust hinges/latches; clear drains $200-1200
Pop-up headlight issues Worn gears, tired motors, sticky linkages Service linkage; replace gears/motor; clean grounds $200-800
Charging/voltage problems Weak alternator, corroded grounds, old battery Alternator rebuild; renew grounds; proper battery $250-700
Random misfire under load Old coils/leads, plug gap, poor grounds, boost leak Ignition refresh; correct plugs/gap; fix leaks/grounds $150-800
Heater core leak Corrosion from old coolant; age cracks Replace heater core; flush system; new hoses $600-1400
A/C not cold Leaks, dead compressor, incorrect refrigerant conversion Leak test; replace drier/seals; recharge correctly $400-1200
Fuel pump weak/clogged Tank rust/debris; old pump; stale fuel Clean tank; new pump/filter; flush lines $300-900
Exhaust manifold cracks Heat cycling; thin aftermarket headers Weld/replace manifold; new studs; proper support $300-1200
Engine mount collapse Age/heat; increased torque from mods Replace mounts; avoid solid mounts for street $250-800
Cooling system air locks Mid-engine plumbing; improper bleeding procedure Vacuum fill/bleed; verify thermostat and cap $100-400

Differences between JDM & USDM

The Autozam AZ-1 was never officially exported and has no USDM equivalent. Mazda did not certify it for North American sale at any point during its 1992–1995 production run — the kei format itself sits outside FMVSS scope, and the car's gullwing doors, RHD-only configuration, and 657 cc turbocharged drivetrain were not engineered for export. Every AZ-1 in the United States arrived via the 25-year FMVSS exemption (49 CFR 591), which began legalizing the earliest October 1992 cars in late 2017 and finished with the final October 1995 examples in late 2020. Canadian buyers had a 15-year window open from 2007 onward and built up a longer ownership history; many US-market AZ-1s today were originally imported into Canada or arrived directly from Japan after the US 25-year date. Driving position is RHD throughout; no factory LHD conversion exists.

Pre-Purchase Inspection Checklist

Walk this list before you transfer money. The Critical items on an AZ-1 are rust and crash damage. Everything else can be priced into the deal, but a bent subframe or rotten floorpan turns a $30,000 AZ-1 into a parts donor.

Critical Priority

High Priority

Medium Priority

Low Priority

Generation History

AZ-1 (PG6SA) (1992-1994)

  • 657cc F6A turbo; 64 PS kei limit
  • Mid-engine RWD; 5MT standard
  • Gullwing doors; aluminum door frames
  • Autozam brand; Mazda dealer channel
  • Lightweight ~720 kg; sharp steering feel
  • Limited production; niche halo kei sports

AZ-1 Mazdaspeed (1992-1994)

  • Factory aero kit and unique trim
  • Often seen with dealer/factory options
  • Most collectible sub-variant in market
  • Premium for complete, correct pieces

AZ-1 M2 1015/1028 (1992-1994)

  • Rare M2 Inc. tuned/trimmed specials
  • Hard-to-verify provenance; docs matter
  • Highest ceiling when authentic and complete
  • Often misrepresented; inspect carefully

Suzuki Cara (twin) (1993-1995)

  • Badge-engineered AZ-1 sold as Suzuki
  • Different nose/trim; similar mechanicals
  • Rarer in some markets; values vary
  • Parts interchange helps ownership

Sales Numbers by Year

YearNotes
1992Production launched October 1992; partial-year output. Total platform production (AZ-1 + Suzuki Cara) reported at ~4,392 units across 1992–1995.
1995Production ended October 1995. Suzuki Cara variant (PG6SS) ran 1993–1995 with an estimated ~530 units, sold through Suzuki dealers.

Market Data

The AZ-1 came in a base trim plus the Mazdaspeed package and the limited M2 1015 special edition. The Suzuki Cara is the badge-engineered sibling, mechanically identical with a different nose. The trim levels listed as Type A through Type L cover equipment packages and option content rather than mechanical differences.

Production Numbers & Rarity

Generation Years Total Built Notes
PG6SA (AZ-1) 1992-1994 ~4,392 (estimated) Commonly cited total; verify by factory ledger

Rarest variant: M2 1015

Original MSRP & Pricing

Original MSRP: JPY1,498,000 at launch in 1992. Japanese launch price reported at approximately 1,498,000 yen for the standard AZ-1 at October 1992 introduction. Mazdaspeed-equipped cars and M2 specials carried higher prices. No USD launch price exists — the car was JDM-only.

How It Compares

The AZ-1 only really competes with the Honda Beat and the Suzuki Cappuccino because those are the cars buyers actually cross-shop. The AZ-1 is the most exotic of the three with its gullwing doors and turbo MR layout. The Beat is the driver's car and the Cappuccino is the usable one.

Feature PG6SA Honda Beat PP1 Suzuki Cappuccino EA11R
Layout Mid-engine RWD Mid-engine RWD Front-engine FWD
Engine 657cc F6A turbo I3 656cc E07A NA I3 657cc F6A turbo I3
Power (JDM kei cap) 64 PS (claimed) 64 PS (claimed) 64 PS (claimed)
Induction Turbocharged Naturally aspirated Turbocharged
Transmission 5MT 5MT 5MT
Curb weight ~720 kg ~760 kg ~725-750 kg
Body style Coupe, gullwing Roadster, targa Roadster, hardtop
Practicality Very low cargo Low cargo Moderate for kei
Driving character Boosty, pointy MR High-rev NA, playful Turbo FR feel, stable
Parts availability Challenging Challenging Moderate
Collector premium High (icon factor) High (purist appeal) High (usable classic)
Rarity in export mkts Very rare Rare Less rare
Value sensitivity High to originality High to condition Moderate
Direct rival (twin) Autozam AZ-1 Same platform Same kei era niche
Maintenance complexity Medium-high (MR) Medium (MR NA) Medium (FR turbo)
Cabin space Tight Tight Tight but airy

Comparable Alternatives

If the AZ-1 doesn't work out, the obvious alternatives are the other two cars in the ABC trio. The Honda Beat is the naturally aspirated mid-engine roadster, and the Suzuki Cappuccino is the turbocharged front-engine convertible. The Suzuki Cara is the same car as the AZ-1 with different badges and is usually cheaper.

In Pictures

Mazda Autozam AZ-1 — front three-quarter view
Mazda Autozam AZ-1 — the only kei sports car sold with factory gullwing doors. Flickr Image by Akinori YAMADA
Blue 1993 Mazda Autozam AZ-1
1993 Autozam AZ-1 — gullwing doors hinge from the roof rail over composite body panels. Editorial Image by JDMBUYSELL editorial
Mazda Autozam AZ-1 — Top Gear feature
AZ-1 photographed for Top Gear's 'driving the Autozam AZ-1 in Japan' feature. Third party Image by Top Gear

The Buyer's Read

Buying an AZ-1 starts with rust. The steel monocoque rusts at the sills, floorpans, rear subframe, and suspension pickups — the plastic body panels hide the damage until you look underneath. A clean Japanese auction sheet with underside photos matters more than mileage. A low-mile car with rotten sills is a worse buy than a higher-mile car that has been kept dry.

The right car for most buyers is a stock, documented example with the timing belt and water pump done recently. The F6A is a small turbo engine that doesn't tolerate neglect: one overheating event can mean a head gasket, and the mid-engine cooling plumbing is fussy to bleed correctly. If the seller can't say when the coolant was last changed or whether the intercooler fan has been tested, price it as a project or walk.

Skip the M2 1015 unless the paperwork is bulletproof. Only about 25 of the 50 announced cars actually sold; M2 broke up the rest for parts, and the variant gets misrepresented. Mazdaspeed AZ-1s are easier to verify because the parts are documented, but you still need to confirm every Mazdaspeed piece is present before paying the premium.

The Suzuki Cara is the value route if you can find one — the same car with different badges, a different grille, and roughly 530 total units built. The collector market hasn't fully priced in the Cara's lower production numbers yet. Driver-grade AZ-1s trade around $18,000–$25,000; clean stock examples sit in the $30,000–$45,000 range; top originals with Mazdaspeed equipment can pass $55,000.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Autozam AZ-1 and why is it special?
A 1992–1994 kei mid-engine coupe with gullwing doors. Rarity and design drive collector demand.
What should I pay for a good AZ-1 today?
Most trade around $18k–$45k; top originals can exceed $55k. Rust-free, stock cars bring premiums.
When is the AZ-1 legal to import to the US?
Under the 25-year rule, 1992 cars became legal in 2017; the last 1994 cars in 2019.
What are the biggest problem areas to inspect?
Rust, crash repairs, cooling system health, door struts/hinges, and missing trim. Verify chassis straightness.
Is the AZ-1 reliable as a weekend car?
Yes if maintained: fresh hoses, coolant, and turbo oiling. Expect age-related issues and parts hunting.
Do modifications hurt AZ-1 value?
Often yes. Collectors pay for original wheels/trim/aero. Period-correct upgrades with documentation fare better.
How does it compare to a Honda Beat or Cappuccino?
AZ-1 is the most exotic (gullwing MR turbo). Beat is revvy NA; Cappuccino is more usable with FR balance.
What options or variants are most desirable?
Mazdaspeed-equipped cars and verified M2 specials lead. Documentation and complete parts are critical.

11 sources cited below

Sources & References

Sources (11)
  1. Autozam AZ-1 — encyclopedic overview — WikipediaVerified
  2. Driving the Autozam AZ-1 in Japan — Top GearVerified
  3. Every day is O-Kei in the Autozam AZ-1 microcar — Driving.caVerified
  4. K-cars: All you need to know about them — CrooooberVerified
  5. Suzuki Cara — encyclopedic overview of the AZ-1 sibling — WikipediaVerified
  6. Autozam — Mazda's small-car sub-brand (1989–1998) — WikipediaVerified
  7. Kei car — regulatory background and 660 cc displacement cap — WikipediaVerified
  8. Autozam AZ-1 sales results archive — Bring a TrailerVerified
  9. Autozam AZ-1 — feature article — SilodromeVerified
  10. Autozam AZ-1 auction results search — Cars & BidsVerified
  11. Strange & crazy cars (404 — preserved from WP source for citation lineage) — AutomoblogLink dead

Sources last verified:

Market & demand on JDMBUYSELL

Reported sold prices and buyer-inquiry trend for the Mazda Autozam AZ-1 PG6SA on the JDMBUYSELL marketplace.

Source: /api/market-data/mazda/autozam-az-1/pg6sa.json · Sold prices aggregated from listings marked sold by private-party sellers on JDMBUYSELL — seller-reported, not verified hammer prices. Inquiry counts are distinct buyer-to-seller conversations referencing at least one listing for this chassis.

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