Are you having problems with your Mitsubishi? Let our team of motoring experts keep you up to date with all of the latest Mitsubishi issues & faults. We have gathered all of the most frequently asked questions and problems relating to the Mitsubishi in one spot to help you decide if it's a smart buy.
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Not really. The brakes should have been inspected during the services, but the wear rate on Japanese cars in general, and Mitsubishis in particular, is lower than you would expect on European cars, for instance. I would expect you should get 80,000 km or so out of yours before they need replacing.
While it's past history now, you shouldn't have accepted the car when the dealer hadn't done what they'd agreed to do. That should have been fair warning that the dealer wasn't as good as his word, and you should have walked away. And never, repeat NEVER, do verbal deals. The rattle could be pre-ignition, but you need to have a mechanic check it for you, and a specialist in Evos would be preferable. As for the dealer, you need to persist and show that you won't go away. Also consider going to the state consumer affairs people.
It won't affect your comprehensive insurance, but it would affect your new-car warranty. It's a modification to the car, so anything that is affected by that modification wouldn't be covered by the warranty. I wouldn't fit it myself, I don't believe it would have much affect, other than probably increase the fuel consumption.
Timing chains do not need to be replaced regularly as timing belts do, so there is no requirement in the service schedule for such a replacement. But they do wear and can become slack over time, and when that happens they do need to be replaced. If you don't replace them in that situation you risk them breaking or jumping teeth on the drive gears and if either of those things happened you could do serious internal damage to the engine. I'd be inclined to follow your mechanic's advice.
It sounds like it is going into limp-home mode for some reason, and by turning the engine off and re-starting you are resetting the computer so it drives normally again. It is probably a sensor playing up, but because it only happens intermittently it's hard to trace. I would sit down with the dealer and explain the conditions when it happens and give them as much information as possible to trace the cause of the problem.
It would appear the fluid has been overheated, so I would be doing a full flush of the transmission, not just a fluid change. I wouldn't bother about the coolant.
That's correct, the 3.2-litre turbo-diesel engine has a timing chain, not a belt, so doesn't need to be replaced.
Magna belts are generally pretty durable, but the recommended change time is 100,000 km.