takai wrote:Serious? It is a known issue that they completely changed the bottom end configuration to 'resolve.' It is patently obvious that it was an issue, given that they bothered to change it and produce an entirely separate interchange crank (long nose) in case of warranty failure.
Only they didnt resolve it on the big nose, they just increased the clamping pressure slightly and shifted the pivot point forward of the timing belt pulley.
They had an opportunity to do so when they changed the crank entirely for the different bore spacing on the BP, but they just stuck their head in the sand and didnt do a thing.

While I agree that the early B6 setup obviously had issues, my point is that I believe much of these issues to have been exaggerated.
While faults do occur, with how many people carry on about them on forums (mainly Miata.net) you'd think that every second MX5 has the front of the crank shear off.
In actual fact the numbers are far, far lower. (i know it's anecdotal rather than any kind of real data, but of the many, many, many MX5 owners i've met and known both locally and on the forums, I know of maybe 2 NA6s that have had a full failure, and a few more that removed an engine because the pulley "looked" like it had a wobble, and only know of a single BP that's lost the keyway)
A lot probably comes down to our different professions, you've mentioned your an engineer, so you're just looking at the best way to make something.
I'm an accountant, i'm also taking into account that the best way isn't always necessary, sometimes the best value way is the most useful option, which is what I suspect Mazda chose (cost to fully remove the damage risk, vs lowering the risk substantially for less cost)