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Mitsubishi Lancer 2003

Overview

The Lancer was introduced to North America as an all-new car for 2002. The Lancer replaces the old Mirage, but it's bigger and more powerful. Lancer comes with a substantial unibody structure and sophisticated mechanical gear. Lancer features a comfortable, well-equipped cabin, even on the base ES model.

Model Lineup

Mitsubishi casts Lancer in four editions: ES, LS, OZ Rally, and Evolution.

All draw from a 2.0-liter four-cylinder engine. In the ES, LS and OZ Rally, that engine produces 120 horsepower and drives the vehicle's front wheels.

In the Evolution, Mitsubishi uses turbocharging to boost the engine's output to 271 horsepower, which is distributed through a four-wheel-drive setup.

ES is the most popular model due to its competitive pricing and generous amount of standard equipment. It comes with air conditioning, a tachometer in the instrument cluster, an in-dash CD player, and power windows, mirrors and door locks. ES comes standard with a five-speed manual gearbox, but a four-speed automatic is available.

LS is a luxury model that adds cruise control, a remote keyless entry system, a 60/40 split rear seatback, a fold-out armrest with cupholders, carpeted mats on the floor, more speakers for the audio system, and variable intermittent windshield wipers. Exterior enhancements to the LS include body-colored door handles and mirrors, and larger, 15-inch aluminum alloy wheels with 195/60R15 tires. LS comes standard with the automatic.

O-Z Rally takes its name from OZ Racing wheels (pronounced oh-zee), an Italian company that makes top-quality competition wheels for Formula 1, CART, and World Rally Championship race cars. Lancer OZ Rally wears sporty body work inspired by the rally cars, including bumper extensions front and rear, and side skirts. It comes only with a five-speed manual gearbox. White-faced gauges and a cockpit trimmed in black with plastic panels that resemble brushed aluminum give the interior a racy look. A five-speed manual is standard, a four-speed automatic is optional.

Lancer Evolution is a car that has gone through extensive evolution from top to bottom. Changes from the basic Lancer include engine, differentials, suspension, wheels and tires. The body structure has been stiffened. The body gets a special wing, fascia, and even a rear-window wiper (useful for those 70-mph creek crossings). The car also gets special seats and other interior features. Mitsubishi's first Evo model was produced in Japan in 1992. The U.S.-market Evolution is essentially an Evo VIII.

Walkaround

The Mitsubishi Lancer features crisp styling that sets it apart from the ho-hum sameness of most compact sedans. It looks more aggressive, with wheels pushed to edges of the boxed body to stabilize the stance. Short front and rear overhangs improve weight distribution, and the windshield is steeply raked rearward to cheat the wind.

The Evolution looks like a race car. First, there's a big rear wing. Then there's the aggressive front end. The hood has a functional and screened air vent. A big front airdam is filled with a very serious-looking intercooler for the turbo. Blistered, squarish fenders made of lightweight aluminum look ready for competition. Add a roll cage, a big light pod, mambo mud flaps and a bunch of decals, and your Lancer Evolution would look ready to tackle the Rim of the World.

 

Interior Features

2003 Mitsubishi Lancer Mitsubishi Lancer comes with a roomy cabin. Space is generous, and passengers should find more than enough room for heads, legs and elbows.

The seats are covered in premium cloth fabric with silky embroidery stitching on the center inserts in a matching color. Side bolsters on the front buckets have contours for a comfortable fit. The driver's seat moves easily in eight directions, and we had no trouble adjusting it to fit long legs and a tall torso. In back is a bench with indentions for two passengers.

2003 Mitsubishi Lancer The steering column adjusts vertically, and we liked the feel of the thick wheel. For the O-Z Rally, it's padded and covered by stitched leatherette. Big, bold analog gauges are clustered beneath the arching cowl. Black gauges with white lettering are for ES and LS trims, while OZ Rally gets white-faced gauges.

The uncluttered design of the dashboard impressed us, as did the look and tone of materials used to dress the cabin. A band of plastic trim stretches across the upper part of the dashboard and divides it into top and bottom sections. For ES and LS versions, the plastic resembles dark walnut veneer and divides the dash into two-tone regions, with a dark color on top and a lighter one below. The O-Z Rally switches to brushed aluminum color for the trim panel, which blends nicely with the cabin's black color scheme.

The dash has scooped sections in front of each seat but bulges in the middle to extend a center panel of audio and climate controls closer to driver and passenger. Three rotary dials for the ventilation system are large and easy to use. Above the HVAC controls is the audio system, which suffers from tiny dials.

The Evolution model gets Recaro racing seats in blue and black cloth and a three-spoke Momo steering wheel. The center console includes a special button that controls a water-spraying system that helps cool the turbocharger's intercooler to provide maximum horsepower for drivers who compete in weekend club rally events.

Lancer also comes with many standard safety features, including frontal airbags and three-point safety belts for five positions. Front seatbelts have pretensioners with force limiters plus height-adjustable anchors, all of which can help reduce belt injuries in an accident.

2003 Mitsubishi Lancer Driving Impressions

Mitsubishi constructs the Lancer on a rigid unibody platform and equips it with a fully independent suspension. As a result, it feels substantial when set in motion. It's tight but easy to drive, and quite capable of transforming lumpy pavement into a blender smoothie.

With 120 horsepower, the four-cylinder engine is by no means the strongest in class, but special tuning is designed to generate more muscle at low- and mid-range speeds. That's why it leaps off the line and feels downright aggressive when running though second and third gears. There's still power left for passing, and our Lancer proved it can run comfortably at high speeds.

The manual transmission for O-Z Rally has a short stick and shifts quickly. It feels tight and precise, even sporty.

The available four-speed automatic transmission uses electronic controls and adapts shift points to the individual style of the driver. We drove it and were impressed by the smooth and quiet shift work, but noticed the automatic subtly dampened Lancer's spirit as automatics tend to do.

The Lancer Evolution is very fast. We drove one on the road and on a racetrack. It eagerly takes a set going into corners. The car is stable and fast through those turns and then rockets toward the track's next apex.

2003 Mitsubishi Lancer

Summary

Mitsubishi Lancer's size positions it at the center of a crowded field of compacts that includes class leaders Honda Civic and Ford Focus, plus Nissan Sentra, Toyota Corolla, Mazda Protege, Subaru Impreza and Dodge Neon. Competitively, Lancer has the longest body and its extended wheelbase produces a spacious passenger compartment with best-in-class legroom for front seat riders.

Lancer O-Z Rally looks cool and adds sporty touches for a reasonable price.

Lancer Evolution delivers rally car performance and gives Mitsubishi a car that more than competes with the Subaru WRX.

New Lancer Evolution IX model for the UK

Mitsubishi Motors UK has unveiled a new and more powerful version of the iconic Lancer Evolution IX supercar. A development of the FQ-340, the new FQ-360 features a 366bhp version of Mitsubishi’s 2.0-litre turbo engine.

Developed by Ralliart, Mitsubishi's motorsport division also responsible for the limited edition FQ-400, the new FQ-360 shares some of its key components.


A high pressure fuel pump and high-flow catalytic converter as found on the FQ-400, have been alongside a reprogrammed Engine Control Unit (ECU) to create a car that delivers 366bhp at 6887rpm and 363lb ft of torque at a just 3200rpm.

The peak output of 363lb ft is 8lb ft greater than that of the FQ-400 and is delivered 2200rpm lower down the rev range. It’s also 18lb ft more than the FQ-340. Ralliart opted for drivability over headline figures says Paul Brigden, general manager;

"We've worked hard to optimise the FQ-360's driveability... to deliver the best possible driving experience, rather than concentrating on a headline-grabbing power output."

The Mitsubishi Lancer EVO FQ-360 will sprint from 0-60mph in an estimated 4.1sec and top 160mph. These figures underline Lancer Evolution's reputation as a supercar bargain.

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