PH Fleet: Evo X Takes On A Tank Track
Can the Evo prove as good on track as it is point to point?
Mitsubishi Evos are not natural track-day heroes. Despite its rallying ancestry, the Japanese turbo-nutter saloon has never been particularly at home on the circuit.
Don’t get me wrong, an Evo can be a devastatingly quick track weapon, but you’ll need to fiddle with the suspension, brakes, slap on some trick tyres and put it on a diet before you get a properly quick, flingable circuit car.

The Evo awaits its track test, while some slower Japanese metal gets some runs in
Stock Evos, on the other hand, are all about point-to-point pace. In other words, the ability to get to town ‘B’ from town ‘A’ via favourite back-road ‘C’ faster than anything else with four wheels and number plates - including two superbikes – is the crowning glory of an Evo’s talents.
PH’s own long-term Evo – which sits one rung below the crazed FQ400 as the almost-fastest FQ360 version of the latest Evo X – seems to be no exception to the staggering cross-country pace rule. Its 354bhp turbocharged 2.0-litre motor spools up quicker and keeps its power for longer than Evos of old, and the combination of a neurotically sharp turn-in and some very clever four-wheel-drive trickery means that the national speed limit seems an achievable average even on the twistiest, gnarliest B-roads.
Conversely, a standard Evo’s performance on track is traditionally a little disappointing. With Evos of old what has felt like razor-sharp dynamic behaviour on the road has, in the past, translated into a surefooted but unrewarding and surprisingly unadjustable on-track performance. In the end the rigours of circuit driving has left many an Evo with no way to hide its bulk, and only heavily worn tyres, brakes and clutch to show for all its techno-wizardry.
With the Evo X no longer even the genuine heir to a rally crown, the tenth generation of Mitsubishi’s performance hero ought to follow the same path, but PH has a sneaking suspicion that the Evo X FQ360 might buck tradition and prove hotter at the track than something weighing 1560kg has any right to.
It was with that thought in mind that we decided to take our Evo along to the recent Help for Heroes track day at Dorset’s Bovington tank test facility. If anywhere was going to test the Evo’s track-day credibility Bovington’s four-odd miles of sweeping, undulating track punctuated with tight, technical traffic cone chicanes would be it.
Initial runs were almost disappointing. Yes, the FQ360’s linear power delivery made it effortlessly fast. Yes, it proved amazingly chuckable through the technical sections (catching a heavily breathed-on R33 Skyline and harrying it through the coned sections, despite it shooting away on the straights was a particular highlight). And yes, it felt as though it was electromagnetically attached to the track. Somehow, though, the sheer capability of it all left me feeling a little cold – where was the adjustability, the challenge?
The answer appeared when I took the Evo out with the Active Yaw Control and Active Stability Control switched off. With the trick electronics securely tucked away, the FQ360 was transformed. The basic neutral balance of the chassis was allowed to shine through properly for the first time.
Suddenly you could pitch it into corners on the brakes and keep it balanced on the throttle without the electronic stability programme turning a tippy-toed almost-drift into a flat, uninspiring experience of grip with a whiff of understeer. Even when it rained, the ASC-off neutral handling balance remained.
In fact, even though the brakes and tyres took the inevitable pounding of a large saloon at a track day, the PH Evo actually felt like it used its brakes a wee bit less with the electronic intervention turned off – presumably because you have greater control on the limit.
A thorough warming of the gearbox oil also turned what is otherwise a rather crunchy, obstructive gearchange into a much more flowing, slick experience.
In the end FQ360 proved itself more than equal to the task of Exige-chaser, and the all-wheel-drive security is most definitely a boon at a place like Bovington, where nasty gutters and unforgiving wooden posts line the track. I did hand the keys back to Chris-R the following Monday with a rather apologetic smile, however, as i pointed to the near-slick front tyres and muttered, "you might want to get those looked at..."
You have to give credit where it's due though, the Evo was very very fast. The gap to 2WD cars was immense as soon as it got wet. The Exiges might have well have been going backwards!
In fact... there were a lot of cars which _were_ going backwards. There were at least 5 serious crashes with at least 3 or 4 cars written off, including a tasty M3. There's a thread in Trackdays forum with more details from the day and photo's of the trashed cars.
Cheers
:-)
At times, I would leave it in the carpark and take the Rangie home instead, which I think you'll agree is most odd for a PHer. The Evo will be missed by every other member of the team, but while I respected it I can't say that I will be mourning our loss.
Sorry Evo

You have to give credit where it's due though, the Evo was very very fast. The gap to 2WD cars was immense as soon as it got wet. The Exiges might have well have been going backwards!
In fact... there were a lot of cars which _were_ going backwards. There were at least 5 serious crashes with at least 3 or 4 cars written off, including a tasty M3. There's a thread in Trackdays forum with more details from the day and photo's of the trashed cars.
Cheers
:-)

Cheers
:-)
Bovington Pics
RE: Bovington Charity Trackday
RE: Help For Heroes Track Event Raises £10k
Mini Nurburg . . in Dorset!...Sunday June 7th
Mini Nurburg . . in Dorset!...Sunday June 7th
Help-for-heroes-bovington-event
Here's a rundown of the casualties:
Not so brilliant for a few of the attendees unfortunately:
- MX5 - Rolled - Written off (Driver _very_ glad he had a roll cage fitted to his SOFT TOP!)
- M3 - Hit concrete bollard backwards - Written off
- Pug 205 - Lost brakes and ran off into a wall - (probably) Written off
- Volvo (about 15:55 at the end of the day) - (apparently) Rolled - (probably) Written off
- Mazda RX8 - Slid off into bushes - Probably ok (missed some metal posts by inches)
- Caterfield/7 type car - Unkown accident - Broken o/s front suspension probably fixable
I haven't seen photos of all the crashed cars, but here's some pics from various places:
Mazda MX5



Pug 205
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8k7MgGIEjKQ


BMW M3


If you like photos of unbent cars, there's loads more in the links to threads above.
Cheers
:-)
And I don't see how turning it off would make the car handle with more neutrality anyway. AYC only ever wants to make the car under steer less.
Also I've never heard of any model evo not being a fun adjustable handler on-track either. Very strange.
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