Mitsubishi Pajero Evolution
Wheels Australia Magazine|May 2021
A rally-special built to jump and soar, and one that left its competitors in a cloud of dust
Damion Smy
Mitsubishi Pajero Evolution

You’d have to be crazy. Imagine willingly signing up for a 10,000km race that tosses you into some of the world’s most inhospitable conditions where you and your co-driver could be shot at, have to dodge livestock, translate a complex toilet roll-thick course book, negotiate in multiple dialects and overcome mechanical hurdles including inevitable tyre punctures in searing desert heat.

Sound good? Well here is the machine made for exactly this task…

The 1997 Mitsubishi Pajero Evolution was single-mindedly built to win the Dakar rally. While the Lancer Evolution was making a name for itself in the World Rally Championship (WRC), delivering the original Evo I in 1992 and, with the Subaru WRX, changing the performance road-car landscape forever, the other side of Mitsubishi’s Ralliart competition department was beefing up the Pajero to win the toughest race in the world: Dakar.

It all started when Mitsubishi found itself playing catch-up with its Pajero against its Japanese rivals, who’d been selling off-roaders for decades. Toyota, inspired by the original 1948 Land Rover, launched its now iconic Landcruiser globally in 1951, the same year Nissan introduced its alternative, the Patrol.

Mitsubishi had built its version of the Willys Jeep in Japan under licence from 1953, but the company didn’t have permission to export it, losing significant ground to Toyota and Nissan. It wasn’t until the early 1970s that Mitsubishi dipped a toe in the water with its own four-wheel drive, named the ‘Pajero’ concept. Shown at the 1973 Tokyo show, it looked like a halfhearted tarted up Jeep, but the 1979 Pajero II concept was a much more promising execution and not far off the design of the original NB Pajero production model that finally hit Japan’s showrooms in 1982.

This story is from the May 2021 edition of Wheels Australia Magazine.

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This story is from the May 2021 edition of Wheels Australia Magazine.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

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