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For superior ride and handling, the Forte GT has fully independent front and rear suspensions. An independent suspension allows the wheels to follow the road at the best angle for gripping the pavement, without compromising ride comfort. The Mazda 3 has a solid rear axle, with a non-independent rear suspension.
The Forte GT has front and rear stabilizer bars, which help keep the Forte GT flat and controlled during cornering. The Mazda 3’s suspension doesn’t offer a rear stabilizer bar.
The Forte has vehicle speed sensitive variable-assist power steering, for low-effort parking, better control at highway speeds and during hard cornering, and a better feel of the road. The Mazda 3 doesn’t offer variable-assist power steering.
The Forte’s front to rear weight distribution is more even (59.1% to 40.9%) than the Mazda 3’s (60.2% to 39.8%). This gives the Forte more stable handling and braking.
The Forte GT handles at .93 G’s, while the Mazda 3 Carbon Edition Sedan AWD pulls only .83 G’s of cornering force in a Car and Driver skidpad test.
The Forte executes Motor Trend’s “Figure Eight” maneuver quicker than the Mazda 3 Carbon Edition Sedan AWD (27.5 seconds @ .61 average G’s vs. 28.1 seconds @ .58 average G’s).