Mazda 323
2.0-litre common-rail diesel in various development stages (RF4F, RF5C, RF7J). Solid everyday diesel with good torque.
Gets You There Cheaply, But Slowly
The weaker 2.0-litre diesel with 66 kW is genuinely underpowered for the 323 BJ. On the motorway or uphill it quickly becomes a test of patience. Economical, yes โ but overtaking requires foresight and time.
Engine Weaknesses 7
The RF diesel is an interference engine. If the timing belt snaps, pistons and valves collide โ the cylinder head must be replaced. Change interval: 80,000 km or 8 years.
Symptoms: Engine won't start after belt snap, no compression, metallic noises on start attempts
The solenoid valve beneath the injection pump leaks. Diesel seeps out and can attack coolant hoses and wiring looms. Diesel specialists replace only the valve rather than the entire pump.
Symptoms: Diesel smell in engine bay, visible fuel moisture beneath the injection pump, swollen coolant hoses
The Denso injection driver module (IDM, RF2A-18-701A) under the intake manifold develops earthing problems with age. Fault codes are often not set โ difficult to diagnose.
Symptoms: Engine barely responds to throttle when cold, jerky acceleration below 1,500 rpm, normal behaviour above 2,500 rpm
The injector flame seals become porous and leak from around 120,000 km. Diesel mixture escapes and mixes with the engine oil, causing a sharp rise in oil consumption. A known production issue on the RF diesel engine.
Symptoms: Dark, heavily diluted engine oil; elevated oil consumption up to 1 litre/500 km; faint diesel smell at the engine.
The conical seating faces where the high-pressure fuel lines screw into each cylinder can develop leaks. Diesel smell after driving and persistently damp spots on the cylinder head are typical signs.
Symptoms: Strong diesel smell after shutdown; damp spots at line connections on the cylinder head; no visible leak when stationary.
The alternator of the RF diesel engine can fail from around 150,000 km due to bearing failure or regulator faults. The battery is no longer charged and the charge warning light illuminates.
Symptoms: Charge warning light on; battery discharges while driving; vehicle stalls.
The EGR valve carbons up and causes rattling noises and power loss. There are also wiring issues at the EGR electrics that promote temperature-dependent failures.
Symptoms: Rattling from the intake area, power loss especially after rain or cold start, impaired turbo response
Vehicle Weaknesses 8
Typical rust spots on the BJ: lower door edges, rear wheel arches and sills. Lack of factory corrosion protection accelerates the problem. Inspect the underside and wheel arches thoroughly before buying.
ABS, TCS and handbrake warning lights illuminate simultaneously, commonly due to faulty wheel speed sensors. Sensors are inexpensive to replace; a defective control unit is expensive.
Wheel bearings, especially on the rear axle, wear at higher mileage. A faulty wheel bearing can also trigger ABS sensor faults. Replacement parts are available cheaply.
Tail light seals age and become porous, allowing moisture to enter the boot. Water can also collect under the sound-deadening mats in the wheel arch, accelerating rust.
Anti-roll bar rubbers and control arm bushings harden and wear, especially at higher mileage. Typical suspension noise over uneven road surfaces.
The blower resistor on the BJ fails frequently, after which the blower only operates on speed 4 (full voltage). The air conditioning also cuts out at the same time. The resistor behind the glovebox is inexpensive and straightforward to replace.
The handbrake cables on the BJ corrode over the years, becoming stiff or permanently seized. The rear brakes can lock in the applied position or fail to fully release. Particularly affects vehicles where the handbrake is rarely used.
The faux leather on the BJ's steering wheel detaches over time, peeling and becoming sticky. The most frequently touched grip areas at 9 and 3 o'clock are particularly affected. Typical for vehicles of this generation and age.