Re: Shed Of The Week: Mitsubishi GTO

Re: Shed Of The Week: Mitsubishi GTO

Friday 15th August 2014

Shed Of The Week: Mitsubishi GTO

It's got two turbos and 280hp for £1K! The four-wheel steer? Er...



GTO. Three letters that, preceded by the right manufacturer's name, can mean the ultimate in performance and desirability. Names like Ferrari, Pontiac (though you could say the judge is out on that) and, er, Mitsubishi.

Ah yes, about that...
Ah yes, about that...
Yes, well you can't have everything. It was a bit cheeky of Mitsubishi to corral such a magical moniker for the JDM version of their heavy-breathing two plus two coopaye. They were a bit more thoughtful about nomenclature in the UK and the US, where it was called the 3000GT and the Dodge Stealth respectively.

Shed remembers spending a couple of days in the official Mitsubishi UK 3000GT test car. It may seem unlikely now, given that we're so used to supersized cars these days, but driving the beast back then was a pretty daunting prospect. Not only did it have a 3-litre twin turbo engine producing over 280hp - which was considered quite a lot at one time - it was also disconcertingly large and unwieldy for British streets. Again, that might seem odd now but Shed assures us that this was a car he approached for the first time with a healthy degree of respect.

This is certainly one of those cars that polarises opinion. Haters deride it for its oddly underwhelming performance (given the mechanical spec), but supporters are near-rabid in its defence. It's true that, even by today's engorged standards, 1,750kg is not exactly svelte, but you'd have thought that the motor would have been more than up to the job of shifting it along at a sprightly rate.

Well this bit of the interior seems alright
Well this bit of the interior seems alright
In reality, any pre-drive trepidation on Shed's part was unwarranted. To counter any rowdiness from the big blown six, the GT had all manner of mechanical (normal diff up front, viscous coupling in the middle and LSD at the rear), electronic and 'active aero' tackle designed to keep it pointing in the right direction. Or take all the fun out of it, depending on how you view it. The late lamented Richard Burns likened it to driving a whale.

Still, leaving the lardiness to one side, we lesser mortals should be able to get a buzz out of it - if the CPU holds out. There was once a healthy trade in black market 3000GT boards as they often collapsed in exhaustion what with all the jobs they were being asked to do by the car, and Mitsubishi wanted a king's ransom to replace them.

Shed is happy to accept that the dull bonnet is the result of incorrect paint, rather than the result of enormous underbonnet temperatures generated during enthusiastic drifting. Nor would he dream of suggesting that the recalcitrant first gear has come about as a result of enthusiastic drifting, or that the four-wheel steer has been bypassed to facilitate enthusiastic drifting. He wouldn't say any of that, because Mrs Shed hasn't placed any conjugal demands on him lately, so he's in a good mood.

The badge is legendary at least
The badge is legendary at least
And after all, as the vendor more or less says, who needs first gear anyway? Besides, having to change up from first to second would ruin your chances of hitting the claimed 4.2-second time for the 0-60. That is at least a second quicker than the official 'reality', depending on whether you are a member of the 5.2sec or the 5.6sec fraternity, and is presumably the vendor's estimation of the rocketlike additional thrust made possible by the intake and exhaust mods.

Shed never was all that good at maths or physics, but even he is fairly sure that you'd need quite a bit more power than 286hp to get down to 4.2 seconds. At the risk of exposing a degree of comprehensively-educated (in the wrong sense) ignorance, he's going to say that you'd need at least 300hp per tonne for that sort of acceleration, which in a 1,750kg car would equate to something in excess of 500hp. The happy reality is that you can pump these motors up to silly outputs: check out this dude (a PHer) dusting the bottom of a 700hp Scooby owner at Elvington with his 660hp/720lb ft 3000GT. That, according to the owner, was a bone-stock motor with 100K miles up, but doubtless fitted with a few more bits than K&N filters and a chromed-up turbo tube.

Mmm, Ripspeed
Mmm, Ripspeed
Let's not quibble about the finer details of the ad. Remember the price, the increasing rarity (if you believe the internet, of the 35,000 GTS/Stealths/GTOs made, there are just over 500 left) and the fact that they were £46,000 new. If you can keep it going for a year without serious expense, with a new ticket in place, you should at least get your grand back. Ideally of course you do want to be paying rather more than £1,000 for one of these, given the fragility of electronics that aren't going to improve with age, but the prospect of nearly 300hp for the price of a rusty Fiesta surely overrides all considerations of common sense and must be too tempting to resist.

Obviously, predictably, not to say inevitably, it's been slightly barried. But Shed reckons that makes it ideal fodder for one of those European scumbag rallies one sees advertised about the place these days. Travelling in the company of like-minded fools means you'll never be that far from someone who might be able to fix it.

Here's the ad.

Twin turbo,
6 speed,
Manual,
4 wheel drive,
4 wheel steer (currently not working due to a small crack in the rear power steering pipe so it's temporarily been blocked off, but had a new rear steering rack fitted so not much work needed to fix)
Valves are a bit tappy (which has no affect on performace or the running of the vehicle)
New gearbox fitted but first gear occasioanlly doesn't engage first time due to the gear linkage (again, not a major issue)

Otherwise mechanically the car drives absolutely fine and still flies through the MOT every time.
It's very fast and still turns so many heads, I will definitely miss it.

It needs a litle TLC as the bonnet needs respraying due to a previous owner using the wrong paint.
Also someone has noticbly dinged the rear quarter panel recently where the petrol flap is.
When I bought the car I had every intention to fix all these issues but I spent all my money sorting out the engine and gearbox first and unfortunaly haven't had time to fix the vanity side of the car and now the time has come to part due to a change of jobs I can no longer keep it.

Straight through twin performance exhaust (DECAT) (the CAT will be given to the buyer but it still goes through emissions)
Upgraded chrome turbo pipe (RRP £600+)
K&N induction kit
18" OZ racing alloys (2 front tyres will need changing soon, rear ones are new)
Rear lights have been tinted

Author
Discussion

Ved

Original Poster:

3,865 posts

190 months

Friday 15th August 2014
quotequote all
Designed for speed, built for storage. Good looker in its day though.

SV8Predator

2,102 posts

180 months

Friday 15th August 2014
quotequote all
Who's the silly billy who keeps forgetting to put a subject line in his new threads then? Obviously not an experienced PHer!

James1972

98 posts

160 months

Friday 15th August 2014
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Does it come with a free chest wig and medallion ?
Err no just no.

Ved

Original Poster:

3,865 posts

190 months

Friday 15th August 2014
quotequote all
SV8Predator said:
Who's the silly billy who keeps forgetting to put a subject line in his new threads then? Obviously not an experienced PHer!
I'm sure someone will be along shortly

AngryPartsBloke

1,438 posts

166 months

Friday 15th August 2014
quotequote all
Twin Turbo for shed money, that's more like it!

Still wouldn't though.

theJT

326 posts

200 months

Friday 15th August 2014
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I've always rather liked the look (and sound) of these. On paper they're mighty impressive... but I've never been brave enough to buy one on the grounds that I rather expected the electrics to turn into a big cloud of blue smoke at a moments notice. Seeing one for shed money doesn't make me feel any more confident that wouldn't happen.

V8 FOU

3,012 posts

162 months

Friday 15th August 2014
quotequote all
Great shed!
So smoke (literally) around for a year. Sell off the interesting bits for about a monkey, weigh in the rest for £200. £300 for a years fun!
YKYWT

J4CKO

44,325 posts

215 months

Friday 15th August 2014
quotequote all
These always remind me of a Technic Lego supercar and in the Lexicon of 90's Jap metal, these were a bit like your mum getting you a pair of trainers when she went shopping,

Let me explain, you had designs on getting Nike (a Supra), Adidas (300 ZX), Kappa (Skyline) or even some Le Coq Sportif (Impreza) but she comes back with bloody Hi-Tec (3000 GT) and you cannot hide your disappointment, looks the part, is really "Jazzy" (mum word there) and was probably on offer, but it isn't the real deal, its an imposter and completely misses the point and your mates will laugh, even the spod in the Tesco Tearaway trainers.

Uncle John

4,733 posts

206 months

Friday 15th August 2014
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Nice car in it's day but I think there is a whole load of account kicking pain in this one......!

muppet42

357 posts

220 months

Friday 15th August 2014
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I'd rather have a Z32 300zx please. Getting a nice manual TT SWB though...highly doubt that'd be possible for shed money lol

Bisonhead

1,594 posts

204 months

Friday 15th August 2014
quotequote all
I still love the look of these cars. Now into the sort of price range where one could happily run it as a weekend shed for a year and scrap. There is something satisfying about tooling around in a 90s Jap coupe, especially when you arent too concerned about it being dinged.

I probably would.

TaylotS2K

1,964 posts

222 months

Friday 15th August 2014
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Never really liked these. This one has a nice steering wheel cover which would persuade me to buy it though. It's all about the finer details.

The Don of Croy

6,216 posts

174 months

Friday 15th August 2014
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Good value...until it pops.

Still, nice sheddery.

thatguy11

655 posts

138 months

Friday 15th August 2014
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muppet42 said:
I'd rather have a Z32 300zx please. Getting a nice manual TT SWB though...highly doubt that'd be possible for shed money lol
You'd be lucky to get a decent SWB TT for anything less than five times shed money biggrin shame, they're brilliant cars. Definite future classic IMO

suffolk009

6,404 posts

180 months

Friday 15th August 2014
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A friend of mine recently bought one of these for £500. He sold it three weeks later.

only1ian

716 posts

209 months

Friday 15th August 2014
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As a man marrying in 7 days this weeks SOTW article gives me hope and fear in equal margin.

I thought these all had pop up headlights?

Edited by only1ian on Friday 15th August 13:58

rossub

5,141 posts

205 months

Friday 15th August 2014
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500kg more than a JDM Impreza of the same vintage, with near enough the same power. Its a Whale right enough.

GravelBen

16,107 posts

245 months

Friday 15th August 2014
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Now there's a money pit if ever I saw one!

marshall100

1,124 posts

216 months

Friday 15th August 2014
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Is the engine in this the same one that would go on to grace the galant/legnum VR4?

Did they do a range topper as such, or were they all just a little bit mince?

GravelBen

16,107 posts

245 months

Friday 15th August 2014
quotequote all
marshall100 said:
Is the engine in this the same one that would go on to grace the galant/legnum VR4?

Did they do a range topper as such, or were they all just a little bit mince?
Different lump to the various engines the Galant/Legnum VR4 had.

They even made NA versions of the GTO, the epitome of a sheep in wolf's clothing. 1680kg, with a thumping 225bhp!

Edited by GravelBen on Friday 15th August 10:59