I own two nearly identical Mazdaspeed MX-5 Miatas: one red, one gray. This isn’t for any practical purpose; I just like Miatas, and when someone asks about my two-car garage, I enjoy the look on their face when I tell them I have four seats and zero cruise control. But for five years, my red Miata needed a slight tweak to live up to my dreams.
My husband and I bought the red Miata in 2020. Because he sold his motorcycle to fund most of it, I let him make the big decisions. The car came with a soft and hard top, and he immediately bolted on the hard one. I tried to stop him, saying the point of a Miata was the ease of throwing the top back and feeling the open air. He argued that a hard top looked better. I allowed it.


Five years later, the soft top is back on — and I think I finally won him over.
Our two Mazdaspeeds are the same kind of car, but very different examples. Mazda sold the Mazdaspeed Miata as a special edition in the mid-2000s during the second generation of the car, which is called the “NB.” It had 178 horsepower and a six-speed manual transmission, and 20 years later, it remains the only factory-turbocharged Miata.
We bought the red car after it had been sitting on the street for years, undriven. The paint was five different shades of red and burned through on the clear coat, and after fixing some panels, we learned that parts of the car had been repainted elsewhere in the wrong shade. “Ah well,” we said. “Good enough.”
The red car has about 140,000 miles on it, and we’ve modified it with aftermarket wheels, Flyin’ Miata parts, and new suspension.
We got the gray car as a family heirloom. My husband’s grandfather bought it new and perfectly maintained it, and we took ownership of the car a couple of years ago. It has 24,000 miles on it, and stepping into such a perfect example of a 2000s car takes you back in time.
I’d accepted that our red car would be a hard top forever, because I knew my husband loved it. But a few months ago, our YouTube partner XPEL (who also supports the Autopian!) asked us to put the soft top back on.
Owning two examples of the same car gives us a perfect excuse to do science: We’re going to tint the windows on one car with XPEL, measure the interior temperatures in the sun, and see how big of a difference it makes. To do that, they both need to be soft tops.
On Friday night, we went into our attic to retrieve the old soft top. We wrapped it in plastic five years ago, hoping to protect it from temperature swings and anything that could chew through the fabric. It came out of the plastic perfectly — just like I remembered it.
The installation took about two hours. Because we only have one set of tools and couldn’t easily multi-task on a top installation, I acted as backup while my husband did the main work. I sat in the garage writing video scripts, helping line up the tops when needed, and taking photos.
My husband bolted and unbolted everything, popped off the interior carpet, reinstalled the rain rail for the soft top, and put all the hardtop parts in a designated location for when we need them again someday. He also wore his OSHA-certified work shoes the whole night, as he always does while working on cars.
I didn’t expect any revelations after the installation. In my mind, this was for the tint test: We’d install the soft top, do the tint test, then come home and put the hard top back on. But when we finished the installation, my husband turned to me and said: “You know, there’s something very Miata about throwing the top back and feeling the open air. Let’s keep the soft top.”
My jaw dropped.
“Excuse me?” I said. “Mr. Hard Top? Is that you?”
“You know, I get it,” he responded. “I don’t love the look of a soft top, but I’m starting to realize it’s worth slightly less sporty looks to go out and enjoy a convertible.”
This, for me, was like getting a doctor to agree that the joy of overindulging in cheese is worth the cholesterol. I never thought it would happen. I can’t decide if I finally won my husband over, or if we’re both getting old. First comes the soft top, then comes the golf bag and cargo shorts. Then, someday, the Corvette. It’s a slippery slope, I hear.
We took the red car out for a maiden drive after its soft-top reinstallation, and I poked my face out the window. I waved my arms in the wind. I cheered, out loud: “We are so back, baby!”
A Miata with the top down is what a Miata is supposed to be. For five years, the red car’s hard top made me feel isolated from this identity. But now it’s back, and I couldn’t be happier. Surprisingly, my husband feels the same way.
I know who I am, and when it comes to Miatas, I’m a soft-top truther. My husband is on his way there, too. So the question I have for you is: What are you?
“I can’t decide if I finally won my husband over, or if we’re both getting old. First comes the soft top, then comes the golf bag and cargo shorts. Then, someday, the Corvette. It’s a slippery slope, I hear.”
Ha, yeah… what’s the cutoff for Corvettes, though? Was reading a little a few weeks ago about one of the inspirations for the character of Cal played by Dennis Hopper in the 1981 film King of the Mountain which had two storylines, one about struggling musicians and one about the Mulholland Drive street racing scene; one article I came across was this: https://www.edmunds.com/car-reviews/features/street-racing-mulholland-drive-in-1978.html
And a commenter named Skid posted a lengthy comment on https://imcdb.org/vehicle_164456-Chevrolet-Corvette-Sting-Ray-1967.html, part of which is this: “The real Crazy Charlie drove a 1966 Stingray with a 427 and (surprisingly) a Powerglide automatic. It was metallic blue (probably Nassau or Trophy blue) with grey primer on the fenders and hood, no bumpers, wide wheel flares, and a full rollcage. It had a Dick Guldstrand suspension, 13 inch wide wheels on Goodyear Blue Streak tires, and black powder-coated side pipes that everyone agrees were EXTREMELY loud.”
That doesn’t seem like the sort of Corvette driven by someone wearing cargo shorts with a golf bag in the trunk, lol.
Soft Top 4 Life
I’d *almost* rather drive a Miata with an automatic than a Miata with a hard top.
What’s lovely about a soft top is it takes up nearly no space, and the delightful sounds it makes when you’re driving in the rain.
As far as a manual top – Miata’s are the absolute best.
Ohhhhhhh the sounds in the rain are the best
Soft top all the way for me, although I live somewhere that the sun isn’t particularly fierce at any time of the year, and not too cold even in midwinder, so I can be roof down most of the time. I learned very early on that if you go faster than 55mph in an MG Midget, rain doesn’t come into the cabin!
Oh that is so nice. It gets really hot in Texas
I can’t speak to the Miata, but the hard top hasn’t been on my 560SL for anything but winter storage in several years…
I’m a put on the hard top in the late fall and take it off in spring person. Thankfully mine is designed such that the folded soft top sits in a well so it doesn’t take up the package shelf and is nicely covered by a panel on the hardtop, not that it gets driven with the hardtop on very often since its entire purpose in life is for driving with the top down.
Ahhhh that’s great. Ours takes up the shelf
I’m a soft-top all the way. I have an MGB, a NC, and a ND, all in the soft top flavor. The goal is to leave the top down as much as I can, so most of the time people don’t see the top up. I could probably be convinced to do a NC PRHT. Those Mazdaspeed NB’s are special!
They’re so special. We love them
I have a Del Sol, I don’t have to choose. (Yes I wish it was a Miata instead, just let me gloat about this one thing)
Big hell yeah
I’ve got a PRHT, so I guess I’m a both.
It’s got a 6M, but bad knees are pushing me me towards an automatic.
I’d love a new ND, but I’d definitely go soft top vs the RF. So maybe I’m a soft top kind of guy after all.
And unfortunately the “honey, we need one to pass on to each kid” thing isn’t going to fly.
The ND is soooooooo good
NC PRHT seems like the answer for me. Up in our Florida summer, down the rest of the year.
Why would you need to design it that way? My first-gen Boxster just needs me to lower the soft top to put on the hard top. Seems having to choose defeats the purpose of it being a convertible.
A retractable soft top makes something a convertible already.
You don’t need to remove the soft-top at all to fit the hardtop on. I have no idea why Alanis bothered to do that other than maybe utilize the parcel shelf area there when the top is folded up (it’s nicely upholstered since it’s visible with the soft-top up).
Yep, I posted another comment about why! The shelf area is really important when you are dailying the car
Same thing for the Miata. The soft top will fit with the hard top on. We just took out the soft top for storage and weight.
Plus, because Miata hard tops go for a decent amount of money, we bolted it on so it would be harder to steal. That makes it very hard to remove, meaning we don’t really need the soft top under there
Buy one of those garage roof-mounted hoists that easily lets you remove, store, and reinstall your hardtop. If I ever find a hard top for my TR6, that’s the route I’ll choose.
Jeep Wrangler owner, and about the only thing they have in common with Miatas is the hard top vs soft top dichotomy, which I suppose is fortuitous for this article.
I will never own a hard top Jeep. I’m not an off-roader (sue me), and the main reason I’ve owned two jeeps now is that they’re basically the only option for top down+four door/family hauling (until the new bronco came along that is).
And I don’t even care that the hard tops on jeeps are sorta easily removed. I can flip up the soft top at stop light. And I actually think jeeps look better with soft tops. The JL jeeps are even insulated/sealed well enough that there’s basically no temperature penalty in the winters (unlike my last JK). That’s a win/win/win for me.
Anyway, obviously in the soft top camp.
Soft top Jeep! Heck yeah
I have an old YJ with both a hard top and a soft top. I’m not sure what the hard top has to do with off-roading, but I assume mine came with it for cold weather driving since it spent much of its life up near Canada. Having the rear defrost and roll down windows is nice too (versus the half-doors).
That said, I bought a full soft-top kit for it and haven’t installed the hard top since. Yes, it’s much noisier than the hard top, but quickly removing the side panels is great, and even in winter, the Jeep’s heater more than compensates for the thermal loss (it’s not like the fiberglass hard top was really insulated either).
Ironically, the soft-top is better water sealed than the hardtop too.
Nothing wrong with a hardtop convertible as long as you occasionally take it off and drive it as a convertible.
Gosh I love the ease though
The looks, insulation, and durability of a hardtop vs the convenience of putting the top down was a pretty big factor in me choosing an E89 Z4 several years ago. The folding hardtop isn’t as fast as a softtop and it takes up trunk space when down but to me it’s the best of both worlds.
So fair!
I guess I never realized that the whole soft top assembly has to come out when you install a hard top on one of these. Or was that just done for weight savings because racecar?
As someone who was skeptical on the whole convertible thing before getting my Miata, I agree that being able to throw the top down at will is part of the charm. Also the added visibility when I’ve hit the track was a nice bonus.
It doesn’t, which is why this is so confusing to me. The hardtop is absolutely designed to fit over the folded down soft top. I don’t know why you’d bother taking out the soft-top other than using the parcel shelf area?
I only had a soft-top on my NB, and hard tops were getting too expensive, though I did want one for the colder months. I always assumed everyone with a hardtop just kept it on for the fall/winter, then stored it for spring/summer and flipped the soft-top back up.
Hey both! I’m going to copy another comment I made: You can absolutely do both hard and soft together. The soft top will fit with the hard top on. We just took out the soft top for storage and weight.
Plus, because Miata hard tops go for a decent amount of money, we bolted it on so it would be harder to steal. That makes it very hard to remove, meaning we don’t really need the soft top under there
Good to know. I’m sure I would bolt it on too if I had one. Not that they make one for an ND.
I always ask someone with a convertible that I’m riding in to put the top down.
That said, I’d probably never own a convertible.
Love it
Soon you can import the rare 2003 miata coupe. No question there.
MIATA COUPE
I love driving top down in my NA, but mannnnn, the hardtop is so nice to have. About half of the year in Phoenix is awful for top down driving. The hardtop gives better insulation, better visibility, more headroom, and is 1000000% less annoying than driving with the soft top up. The extra chassis rigidity (hardtop security bolts on the back) is an added bonus. If it is nice out, I can always pull the hardtop off in 5 mins and have the top down (or softtop up) experience.
That being said it is easier to get into and out of a soft top than a hardtop. I once locked myself inside of a hardtop convertible. Now that only happens when it was during restoration and I drove to southern Arizona to hit a hardtop without realizing I hadn’t reinstalled the inner door handles and I stripped the manual roll down windows. I have never locked myself out.
This is so fair
I feel particularly close to this topic. I have an S2000, and it seems like nearly every “serious” S2000 owner has a hard top (which can range from $5,000-10,000 for OEM parts depending on color) and its always just struck me as so wrong. Theyre roadsters! inspired by classic British roadsters, or in this case, Honda’s very own heritage.
Team soft top forever, the ability to throw the top down at a moments notice is worth the extra wind noise.
Also, soft top down looks better than hard top on in the case of the NB.
I love this. Good for you
I was a soft-top purist with my NC, my NB, and then my ND. Having replaced the tops on both of the older cars (the whole thing, not just detaching the frame you sweet child) I was not looking forward to doing it on the ND. So when the opportunity arose, I went RF and I’m not looking back. I can certainly appreciate the ST lover point of view, though. My wife’s ND is a soft top, and she wouldn’t have it any other way. When it comes time to replace it, though, I’ll pay someone else to do it and it will be money well spent.
Ditto on the RF if NA’s had convertible hard tops or t tops I would have loved one of those but alas no hard top that be put down and still with you at all times. But I do love the look of the RF ND’s also.
RF is KILLER