Home » I Reinstalled The Soft Top On My Mazda Miata, And I’ve Never Been Happier

I Reinstalled The Soft Top On My Mazda Miata, And I’ve Never Been Happier

Soft Tops Miatas Alanis Ts
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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.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

Five years later, the soft top is back on — and I think I finally won him over. 

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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. 

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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. 

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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. 

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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. 

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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. 

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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. 

very old Sperrys

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. 

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“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. 

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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?

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Andrew Derr
Andrew Derr
3 days ago

Convertibles are the worst thing ever. Looks is the least of the issue. When they finally make a permanent roof miata then I’ll go shopping. Tell your hubby not to be too lazy and he can put the hardtop back on!

Captain Muppet
Captain Muppet
2 days ago
Reply to  Andrew Derr

I’ve tried the convertible life: 20 years total with an Elise, MX5 and mk3 MR2.

I hate having the roof down. All of mine had hard tops, and I hugely preferred all three cars with a hard top. I did try to enjoy them with the roof down, but it’s worse.

Manuel Verissimo
Manuel Verissimo
5 days ago

I’m not a Miata owner but I have a convertible Z4 and I’m team “drop the top when the rain stops”.

Drop it all the time, even in the winter. It’s a joyous experience.

David Lorengo
David Lorengo
5 days ago

I prefer to read over watching you tube or listening to podcasts, glad to see you here at the Autopian @alanisking

PaysOutAllNight
PaysOutAllNight
5 days ago

If snowmobilers can do it, so can I.

My top goes down whenever the roads are dry, regardless of the temperature!

Steve Lee
Steve Lee
6 days ago

Don’t knock the cargo shorts. Pockets. For Days.

Jdoubledub
Jdoubledub
6 days ago

Not one but TWO Mazdaspeeds? You are living the dream.

Acd
Acd
6 days ago

The whole point of a convertible is being able to drive with the top down as often as possible.

Scott
Scott
6 days ago

Thanks for your report Alanis! 🙂

I’m on my second Miata (this time a slightly ratty-looking but low-mile black ’95, which is also some sort of special edition with BBS wheels from the factory and some misc. goodies). I bought it about five years ago for the princely sum of $2,250. and it came with a factory hardtop (also in black, thankfully) which I didn’t have on my first (NB) Miata. Incidentally, do you remember when it was possible to buy a decent, running Miata for $2-3K? Pepperidge Farm remembers. 😉 Also, a factory hardtop was (is?) worth about a grand by itself at the time, so the Miata itself was even cheaper had I decided to sell the hardtop.

Which I did not. I’ve literally not taken the hardtop off since I bought the car: it just looks so good with it on (especially from the rear 3/4 view: https://imgur.com/a/hY4t2C5 ) and visibility (from inside the car) is still excellent (admittedly, not as good as with the top removed/down). It’s not that I don’t like convertibles… I do. I’ve had four so far: the two Miatas, plus a ’69 Stingray and an ’81 Rabbit. It’s just that I enjoy driving my Miata with the hardtop on just as much as I enjoyed driving the last one I owned with the soft top down, that’s all. Top on, lights up (perhaps the best part of the NA are the pop-up headlights, which make the car look so friendly and also look good from the driver’s POV) and windows open and I’m happy. If there’s some 80s tunes on the radio and my dog’s in the passenger seat, so much the better. 🙂

PS: for anyone wondering, you can fit the factory hardtop on the NA/NB Miata (it’s the same fiberglass top for both versions) without removing the soft top. You just fold down the soft top down and install the hard top over it (a few clips/screws and a wired connector for the rear window defroster element) and that’s it. One person can do it by themselves, but it’s much easier with two (I think the hard top weighs about 85 lbs., but I’m not sure). I assume that folks who are going to have the hard top on for a long time sometimes choose to remove the soft top from the car completely to save weight (50ish lbs.? I dunno) and noise (like most convertible tops, when it’s down the soft top rattles a little bit, especially without a boot (cover) over it). But it’s not necessary to do this.

PPS: my particular Miata also has cruise control from the factory, but I’ve never used it. There’s also a couple of switches (I dunno if factory or aftermarket) that I have no idea what they do at all. But that’s fine… it doesn’t bother me at all. 🙂

Last edited 6 days ago by Scott
Turbotictac
Turbotictac
6 days ago
Reply to  Scott

The hardtops weigh about 50 lbs with glass back windows. Also hardtops are very commonly around $2k now for OEM. The hardtops have lttle nubs sticking out to hold the soft top down so it doesn’t bounce around typically.

Scott
Scott
6 days ago
Reply to  Turbotictac

Hmmm… it feels heavier than that, but I’ve only lifted it off once (before I bought the car, and then just to raise and inspect the condition of the soft top) and TBH, my back is shot, so 50 lbs. probably feels like 85 lbs. to me.

I’m all about nubs (which is what I call those extra little carpal pad thingys that dogs have on the back of their forelegs above the dew claw https://pethelpful.com/dogs/whats-the-purpose-of-your-dogs-carpal-pads) but I’m not sure I’ve noticed any on the hardtop pushing down on the soft top… I’ll have to have a look… I might just have missed them. Thanks Turbotictac! 🙂

Turbotictac
Turbotictac
6 days ago

This is tripping me out. I am thinking we are living some sort of parallel life simulation. I also have two Miatas, a gray 2004 Mazdaspeed and a red 99 that has a MSM transmission and turbo kit swapped into it. I have hard tops for both but typically run the MSM without the hardtop on and rely on the soft top. Yesterday, for the first time in 3 years, I reinstalled a soft top on my red Miata because I missed driving with the top down in it. I just now saw this article and was shocked at how similar it synced up with my life choices.

ImissmyoldScout
ImissmyoldScout
6 days ago

Switched the Bronco from a soft top to a hard top. Never going back. I like to hear things, like my wife…and my music…

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