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![]() June 22, 2004
2004 Mitsubishi Lancer Ralliart By Jil McIntosh Last year, Mitsubishi sent me forth in their Lancer O-Z Rally edition. I definitely wasn't impressed. All that provocative name meant was a pricey trim package bolted onto the ordinary Lancer - including the same engine and driveline. My advice was to wait for the upcoming 2004 Lancer Ralliart. Well, it's here. And if you did listen to me, now's the time to take the hammer to your piggybank. Ralliart's got some steak to go with the sizzle this time. The Lancer lineup received a facelift for 2004, and while the general shape is still evident, there's a bit more swoop and sexy over the previous box-on-wheels. All Lancers, including Ralliart, are available in a four-door sedan, while Lancer LS and Ralliart can also be ordered as Sportback wagons. The kicker is Ralliart's exclusive 2.4 litre SOHC 4-cylinder MIVEC (Mitsubishi Innovative Valve timing and lift Electronic Control - hey, I just report 'em, I don't name 'em) engine, which hits 162 twice - its horsepower at 5,750 rpm, and its lb-ft of torque at 4,000 rpm. Lancer ES, LS and O-Z Rally only carry 2.0-litre engines producing 120 horsepower. (LS Sportback gets a 2.4 that rates 160 horsepower.)
Even the base cars come with numerous features, including fog lamps, variable intermittent wipers, heated power mirrors, air, cruise, and power windows and locks. Mine came with the optional "Sun & Sound" package, which included a sunroof and a premium Mitsubishi/Infinity AM/FM/CD with six speakers and an eight-inch subwoofer in the trunk. It takes up some of the cargo space, but there's still enough room for a week's shopping. The throaty engine moves out with confidence. It's well-mannered enough to take to church, but downshift and hit the throttle, and those horses race smoothly through the close-coupled shifter, borrowed from the Lancer Evolution. It's a high-revver, and I averaged 11.2 litres/100 km. The reinforced unibody and three-point front strut-tower brace give it sports car rigidity, and the rack-and-pinion steering is quick and direct. Controls are simple and unobstructed, and the blast-furnace heater works so well that I actually had to turn it way down on a bitterly cold day - and me turning down a heater is like Cher turning down another farewell tour. On its own, the car is a good deal for the price tag, and offers decent performance in a practical package that will carry five people and their cargo.
Of its 18 Ontario dealers, only seven are in the GTA, and none are actually within the City of Toronto. I contacted two of them to check availability of four fairly common parts: starter, water pump, radiator and $304-per-pair front brake rotors. (Actually, I phoned three, but gave up on the third after calling twice and remaining on hold several minutes each time; the parts department never did pick up the call.) All four parts - actually, all parts, period, as one shop told me - require two days to come from the United States. Most new cars are relatively reliable, but every manufacturer experiences the odd breakdown, and the thought of an automatic two-day wait for any repairs I'd need is not a comforting one. Mitsubishi is in a Catch-22 that has always affected freshly-established companies: it needs to sell cars to launch itself, but until it's firmly in place, it's tough to sell cars. With a performance Lancer that finally lives up to the hype, at least they're on the right track. Technical Data: 2004 Mitsubishi Lancer Ralliart sedan
Jil McIntosh's automotive work and her garage includes cars both old and new; she writes for The Toronto Star Wheels, Old Autos, and Canadian Street Rodder. |
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