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88DB Lifestyle >> Automotive >> Car Review >> Road Test - Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X

First, it was Subaru's Impreza WRX. Now, Mitsubishi has decided it would follow suit
in the face of its lesser competitor, so it went ahead with the X, diluting it in the process.
All we're left with now is a bunch of...

Text and photos by Amery Reuben
Uploaded on 27 August 2008

powered by SG Car Mart
 
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Steel that moves and is 113 kilos heavier. This comes in the way of the usual active differentials, an increased amount of active stability control, a five speed manual and the turbocharged, all-aluminum engine.

The 2008 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X has been strengthened in its entirety. In particular, the chunky firewall that stretches across the entire width of the rear, just behind the C-pillar and back seats. Very little space is left in the Evo’s boot, and there is an absence in accessibility of the trunk-passenger compartment.

The Evo X is also the first of its relatively long line of descendants that comes with a somewhat comprehensive entertainment and navigation system, Xenon headlights and very comfortable Recaro seats.

That’s exactly what this car is - stronger, more powerful and ironically, more luxurious. Luxury isn’t light. It adds weight, lots of it.

More weight means less speed.

Mechanics
The X’s all new centre-piece would have to be a 1,998cc all-aluminum 4B-11, of which the naturally aspirated base variant finds its home in the Lancer GT. It weighs 12.7kg less than the beloved, iron-block 4G63 of Evos past, and develops even more (undisclosed) peak power - 291 horses at 6,500 rpm and mind numbing 407 Newton-metres of torque from 4,000 rpm.

In both the GT and the Evo, the preliminary design has been shared, but the inline four on the latter was unequivocally beefed up in the way of a semi-closed deck block, a forged crank, and a slightly raised compression ratio of 9.0:1. Mitsubishi’s MIVEC variable valve timing system is now available on both the intake and exhaust lobes, and the 4B-11’s cams are now chain-driven.

Mitsubishi has surprisingly abandoned the IX MR’s excellent 6-speeder to make way for a strengthened, five-ratio unit. A plus side would probably be that drivetrain lash we hated in the Evo IX during rapid on-off throttle transitions. It isn’t a problem in the X.

Needless to say, the Evo X’s silver lining is a wider track width of 3cm, bigger Brembos, Super All-Wheel Control with the Active Center Differential (ACD) all-wheel drive system, and of course the Active Yaw Control, all of which give the Evo its famous zero-counter attacks through overcooked corner entries.

The primary method of operating the system isn’t very different, with the toggle for “Tarmac, Gravel and Snow” now located on the steering wheel itself.

Driving Impressions
The first thing you’ll notice, and perhaps like, is the driving position. No longer do you have to grapple with the lack of steering reach, a problem that I once had with the Evo IX. Those short arms of yours were truly a bad match for the IX, a problem that disappears in the new car.

Then after you crank the engine and slip it into first, you’ll find the entire car to be much smoother than any Evo you’ve driven before in your life, perhaps a little too smooth...

For all of it’s weight worth in slickness and efficiency, Mitsubishi happily decided to give the 4G63T’s punchy, brutal nature a rest. In previous Mitsubishi Evolutions, acceleration from low engine revs was somewhat of a novelty – you simply plant your right foot down, watch the tachometer swing past 2000rpm, take 5 seconds to wonder where all that power went to, and then pull over on the road shoulder to sign the insurance papers after rear ending that nice Mercedes-Benz in front of you.

In the Evo X, the boost piles on cleanly and in a very, very linear fashion from the lowest of RPMs, an area that the 4G wasn’t good at. It is very smooth, and very European.

And also very dull.

You might want to know though, that the rev limiter’s fuel cutoff only sets in at 7,600rpm – 600rpm higher than advertised on the Evo X’s tachometer. At such giddy heights associated only with normally aspirated engines, the “X” pulls strongly, and never feels like it is short of breath.

You would also like to know that the team squeezed an average of 5.2 seconds for the new Evo’s 0-100 km/h timing with half a tank of petrol and with the air-conditioning turned off, as well as excess weight on board (ie. Co-driver and a host of camera equipment) and a poor set of launching skills courtesy of yours truly.

The car breaches the 130km/h barrier in the manner associated with the most powerful, factory Evos of past. Above these speeds though, is where the new one tends to lack a certain amount of luster, and this is where the lighter Evo IXMR might start inching away.

Amongst the few things that have not changed would be the tricky launch technique in an Evo. Maintain 5,200 rpm, feed the clutch in like feeding a lion while anticipating that precise moment to give it the stuff. It doesn’t take much to bog it off the line, and you might not want to practice doing this too many times in your new Mitsubishi...

So the inventors of the new Evo should not commit the age-old tradition of Hara Kiri just yet.

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