Two decades ago engineers at Mazda Europe secretly plonked a 2.5-litre V6 into Mazda MX-5, and found a few issues.

Christian Schultze, Mazda Europe’s director of research and operations, revealed to AutoRAI.nl the company’s European engineers built a prototype MX-5 with a 2.5-litre V6.

Although Mr Schultze doesn’t mention which generation of MX-5 the V6 was fitted to, we presume it was the third-generation ‘NC’ MX-5 as it went into production in 2005.

The NC is to-date the largest MX-5, but the engineers found packaging the V6 problematic as “the engine didn’t fit well under the bonnet [as] it was simply too high [and] the result wasn’t visually appealing”.

According to Mr Schultze, the driving experience “was definitely interesting”. No word on which version of the K-Series V6 was employed, but it was likely a Euro-spec variant used in the earlier 626, MX-6 and Xedos 9/Eunos 800, which was rated at around 125kW and 216Nm.

For reference, the 2.0-litre MX-5 of the time had 125kW and 190Nm to its name.