2012 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution
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    2012 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution Expert Review: Autoblog

    Light Weight, Rear-Wheel Drive And Instant Torque Bubble Up

    2012 Mitsubishi i

    There are two simple truths about the Mitsubishi i that should help this funky little electric car sell well in the U.S. once it goes on sale later this year. First, it looks like absolutely nothing else on the road today. Second, the car is much more fun than its jellybean shape implies.

    The North American-spec i does share its look with versions on sale in Japan and Europe, but this EV is a different beast compared to those models. It's also completely different from the gas-powered kei-car sold only in Mitsubishi's home market, which was named the Japan Car of the Year by the Automotive Researchers' and Journalists' Conference in 2007. It's also completely different from the Japan or Euro-spec electric i-MiEVs (which are also slightly different from each other) that Mitsubishi has been showing off in the U.S. for the past few years. We've had a chance to drive these other models, and you can read our thoughts on the foreign i-MiEV here and here. At this point, though, it's best not to bother – this i is something new.

    That's part of the idea, since the i is meant to be distinctive. Love it or hate it, Mitsubishi thinks that this is what electric car buyers want: an electric vehicle that looks like an electric vehicle, even if it comes from gas roots.


    One of Mitsubishi's defining design parameters for this vehicle was a focus on simplicity. This is obvious as soon as you see the car and its sparse-feeling dashboard. Simplicity, however, means there has been some clever thinking done to improve the car for its U.S. introduction. Mitsubishi has beefed up the i's size and the performance of its all-electric powertrain. The car is 4.3 inches wider and 8 inches longer, for example, though the wheelbase is the same as other i models. The calibration of the electronic control unit is also specific to this market. And, not that EV buyers pick their plug-in vehicles based on safety concerns, but the U.S. i also adds side curtain airbags for the first time.

    These look like small changes on paper, but behind the wheel, they make a huge difference.

    2012 Mitsubishi i side view2012 Mitsubishi i front view2012 Mitsubishi i rear view

    In our first drive of the i-MiEV, all the way back at the 2008 New York Auto Show, we wrote, "Make no mistake: the i MiEV is not quick in any sense, but the power on tap is perfectly suited to city driving." Today, with all its various improvements, we can say the new i is, well, quick. It's not quick like a Tesla Roadster, but it'll do just fine zipping onto the highway and darting about in the city. We found this out after spending an afternoon with a pre-production model in Portland, Oregon.

    The i offers more fun than should be expected with a small EV.

    There is no official time for a trip from 0-60 just yet, but the electric motor is quicker and provides slightly more horsepower (three, to be exact, for a total of 66) than the Japanese Domestic Market version, enough to accelerate to 50-60 mph with spunk. Mitsubishi says that 30-35 mph is the "ideal speed" for electric cars and they're perfectly suited for urban environments, but when let loose in this venue, the i offers more fun than should be expected with a small EV – as long as you have its settings just right.

    The i's three drive modes – Eco, D and B – remain nominally the same as before, but they have been tweaked. Eco, as should be familiar to many plug-in and hybrid drivers, prioritizes efficiency and longer range over dynamic performance, while D operates the way a standard gas engine would and is suitable for going up hills. It's the B mode, though, that's been changed the most. It now has much more regenerative brake power to accommodate one-foot EV driving, if that's your thing. Interestingly, B mode is also the most fun, with the interaction between driver and car feeling a bit like the connection that some find in manual transmission cars. You can't directly dial-in the regen braking level, but you can approximate it by cycling through the three modes. We were happy to discover that you can also shift into Neutral on long downhills for regen-free coasting, and we like the slight parking lot creep as well.

    2012 Mitsubishi i headlight2012 Mitsubishi i taillight2012 Mitsubishi i wheel2012 Mitsubishi i graphics

    When you're not paying attention to the powertrain, you've got to watch the road for fun curves. For this, the i's wider stance helps with handling, but it's no mountain goat. Still, when you put all of the improvements together with the i's small size, low center of gravity (the 500-pound battery is part of the 600-pound penalty that the electric i has over the gas-powered version) and rear-wheel-drive powertrain, you've got an EV that's more fun than it should be, especially given its skinny tires. We'll call it "suitable fun."

    The 500-pound battery is the biggest part of the electric i's 600-pound penalty.

    One area where Mitsubishi has skimped on details – we could be generous by saying the beancounters and engineers have kept the car's simplicity ethos intact – is on the information-sparse dashboard. All you see is a battery state-of-charge meter, a gear indicator, the speedometer, the eco/regen indicator and the odometer. Serious EV fans will want to know more.

    For instance, the i has 16 bars in its battery state-of-charge gauge. When the gauge gets down to two bars, the low battery lights comes on. When there's five percent usable energy left, a turtle light comes on. At three percent, the car goes into limp mode, which gives the driver just a few miles of range left at low speeds to get to an outlet. Since the i only uses around 92 percent of its 300-volt, 16-kWh, 500-lb. battery to preserve the pack's life, when the car tells you it's at "zero," it's really at about eight percent from empty.

    2012 Mitsubishi i gauges2012 Mitsubishi i interior2012 Mitsubishi i climate controls2012 Mitsubishi i navigation system

    The spartan dashboard isn't completely useless, of course. It does have a digital speedometer surrounded by a charge/eco power meter. The goal, if you're going for efficiency, is to keep it in the "eco" range, since the white zone indicates when you're using more energy. Taking your foot off the pedal puts the car into the charge zone. How do you keep it in eco? By being sensible: Keep a consistent speed, let the car decelerate without hitting the brake whenever possible, use momentum to crest uphills when possible, preheat or precool the car when it's plugged into the grid (if you're already on the road, use the standard seat heater instead of heating the cabin) and so on.

    Speaking of plugging in, what about the battery? Made up of 88 3.7V cells arranged into 22 modules, the pack is waterproof and wrapped in a stainless steel case designed to protect the system in a crash. Using a standard 120-volt outlet, the pack will take a whopping 22.5 hours to charge from empty. However, this drops to just seven hours using a 240V EVSE, and i models equipped with CHAdeMO capability will take just 20-30 minutes to get to 80 percent full. No announcement has been made about possible car-to-home charging in the U.S., but we have to assume this technology will make the jump across the pond.

    2012 Mitsubishi i battery pack

    The pack is air-cooled using forced induction, which means that an exhaust fan pulls hot air through the pack. When the pack is above 68 degrees Fahrenheit, the fans blow ambient air through the battery. If that's not enough and the pack gets above 86 degrees, the car's air-con unit will automatically turn on and force cooled air through the pack. This won't happen very much, apparently, but quick-charging will often raise the temperature above 86 degrees – even if Mitsubish says that daily quick-charging is not a problem for this car.

    The rest of the powertrain is just as well sorted. The small, 101-pound maintenance-free motor is waterproof, has a dust-resistant casing and offers 9,900 maximum rpm along with that one joyous benefit of EVs: instant torque. The just-as-small transmission weighs only 42 pounds. The powertrain has a five-year, 60,000-mile warranty and the battery is warranted for eight years or 100,000 miles. All this technology gives Mitsubishi bragging rights to an EPA rating of 112 mpge, and it should be good for a maximum of 98 miles on a charge. Mitsubishi itself is being a bit more conservative, suggesting that drivers should expect around 85 miles out of a full pack, even though the Monroney is going to say this little bubble has a range of 62 miles.

    2012 Mitsubishi i charging2012 Mitsubishi i charging

    How does that work? Well, the EPA measures electric vehicles using a two-cycle (city/highway) test and then subtracts 30 percent from these numbers to approximate "real world" driving. 70 percent of the i's city range (98 miles) is 69 miles. 70 percent of the car's highway range (78 miles) is 55 miles. In calculating a combined (city/highway) driving range, the EPA weighs the formula slightly more in the favor of the city range (55 percent) versus the highway range (45 percent), thus: (98 miles at 55 percent) + (78 miles at 45 percent) x 70 percent = 62 miles. That may make some sort of regulatory sense, but there should no longer be any doubt that your mileage may vary when it comes to EV range estimates.

    Another simple solution Mitsubishi uses with the i is its bizarre remote key fob. This non-Internet-connected device can communicate wirelessly with the vehicle (if within range) to pre-heat or pre-cool the vehicle, as well as set the charging process. We think the fob is too big and does too little – and carrying another digital piece of plastic is annoying – but company spokesman Maurice Durand reminds AutoblogGreen that Mitsubishi is really dealing with a car that's three years old at this point, and the fob was the simplest solution without adding cost. We hope that a smart-phone solution will be coming at some point.

    2012 Mitsubishi i key fob

    There are some similarities with the original i and i-MiEV models. For instance, the interior is much bigger than you expect it to be, and tall passengers will fit comfortably in front or back. When the rear seats are folded down, the i offers over 50 cubic feet of cargo room, accessed through an expansive rear opening.

    There is one thing where the U.S.-spec i really, truly needs to be changed. The gear identifiers are on the right side of the shifter stalk, exactly opposite of where they should be. This is a holdover from the car's Japanese origin, but the small gear indicator on the dash is not easy enough to see to replace the big white letters on the shifter itself. Little quirks like these make you wonder, since you'd think that Mitsubishi would know what it's doing when it comes to EVs by now. The company's first EV was the Mini Cab EV, which was made way back in 1966. Mitsubishi also made the Minica EV in 1971. It was powered by heavy lead acid batteries, but it was followed by Mitsu's first li-ion battery car, the FTO EV, in 1999. Ah, well.

    2012 Mitsubishi i rear cargo area2012 Mitsubishi i shifter

    We'll know soon enough whether these minor problems keep buyers away from the i. The first deliveries will happen in four rollout states – California, Oregon, Washington and Hawaii – in early 2012. While all 400 Mitsubishi dealers nationwide will get ads for their showrooms to highlight the differences between gas and electric vehicles in the third quarter of 2011, about 75 percent of the roughly 40 Mitsubishi dealers in the rollout states will be i certified (with more to come). On top of the information sent to everyone, certified dealers will get three vehicle chargers, a drop-down i sign and an Apple iPad loaded with i information. By the end of November or early December, all certified dealers will also get (read: have to purchase) two i vehicles, one for display and one for demo drives. So, that's 60 units sold right there. The i will be available nationwide by the end of 2012.

    Originally, the before-rebate cost for the entry-level ES version was going to be $27,990, but "unforeseen" changes (i.e., a stronger yen) caused this to climb up to $29,125 ($21,625 after tax credit). The top-of-the-line SE with Premium package, which includes CHAdeMO quick charging capability, will command $33,915 ($26,415 after tax credit). On top of the car's MSRP, Mitsubishi is partnering with Best Buy's Geek Squad to install $700 Eaton home chargers (plus installation fees).

    2012 Mitsubishi i rear 3/4 view

    As these prices imply, Mitsubishi is not trying to make a luxury electric car here. Instead, it is trying to make the most affordable EV in the U.S. – the opposite of the Tesla plan. Mitsubishi representatives tell us that the company feels low costs are important to encourage electric vehicle adoption, especially for the target demographic. Mitsubishi estimates sales of 1,500 in the first fiscal year (through March 31, 2012) and then 3,000 to 5,000 in the second fiscal year (April 2012 – March 2013). So far, Mitsubishi has gotten around 400 i pre-orders through its website.

    Mitsubishi may have a bit of a sleeper hit on its hands.

    If sales in Europe and Japan are anything to go by, the i should sell just fine in the States. The i-MiEV was introduced to the market in July of 2009 and has already sold around 11,000 units. It's important to note that that's just the Mitsubishi version, since both Peugeot and Citroën have been selling rebadged versions in Europe since 2010. Bryan Arnett, Mitsubishi Motors North America's manager of EV product strategy, said that the i is the "most-proven mass production electric vehicle available today. We feel very confident bringing the U.S.-spec version of the car to the United States."

    Mitsubishi may have a bit of a sleeper hit on its hands, too. We know that first-gen EVs are not for everyone, but the pace of change in this category means the EV that's right for you may be here sooner than you realize. In fact, if none of this sounds that exciting to you, but you really wanted to like the i, don't worry. Mitsubishi reps have told us that the next-gen model is not far away.
    The following review is for a 2011 Model Year. There may be minor changes to current model you are looking at.

    Affordable compact to Evo, all of them good.

    Introduction

    If it's a compact car you're looking for, the 2011 Mitsubishi Lancer will have your head spinning at nine enticing models. The Lancer is a clean and lovely car, even with its fish face. Some see a shark mouth, and say the Lancer is lovely because of it, not despite it. Its good looks give it distinction in its field. Its good engines give it value. 

    All 2011 Lancers have anti-lock brakes and electronic stability control standard, along with seven airbags, the latest being driver's knee. 

    The 2011 Mitsubishi Lancer lineup starts with the $14,995 Lancer DE, not quite bare bones because it's got power doors and windows, keyless entry and auto halogen headlamps, but lacks air conditioning, 60/40 folding rear seat, and cruise control. But it's got the same good 2.0-liter engine with variable valve timing making 148 horsepower. Driving gets more civilized with the Lancer ES with air conditioning and better seats, front and rear. 

    New for 2011 is the Lancer ES Sportback, a smooth-looking 5-door that made its debut on the 2010 Lancer Ralliart. Fuel economy for the Lancer ES is an EPA-estimated 25/32 mpg City/Highway. We found the Lancer ES offers decent steering response and tracks well through corners, with no excessive body lean. 

    The Lancer GTS climbs the ladder with its 2.4-liter engine, a gem of a powerplant coupled with a sweet 5-speed gearbox or 6-step CVT with paddle shifters (23/30 mpg). We tested the Lancer GTS Sportback version complete with front air dam and rear spoiler, our test car with a 5-speed, looking sleek in Graphite Gray Pearl and beautiful 18-inch 10-spoke alloy wheels. The GTS is a compelling value for its good looks, enjoyable driving characteristics, affordable pricing, and fuel economy, with an EPA-estimated 24/31 mpg City/Highway. If you don't need all-wheel drive or turbocharged acceleration, the GTS is the one, especially in the new Sportback body style with a great cargo area. 

    The all-wheel-drive Lancer Ralliart moves into high-performance land with an intercooled and turbocharged 2.0-liter engine making 237 horsepower, and showcasing Mitsubishi's racy 6-speed twin-clutch automated manual transmission. Sedan or Sportback, flared fenders, hood scoop, vents like shark gills, optional Recaro seats. The fishface gets a chrome ring, like silver lipstick on a largemouth bass. 

    The Lancer Evolution, the Evo, pumps out 291 horsepower. Shapely sedan only, with 5-speed GSR model, or with 6-speed twin clutch MS, which adds Bilstein shocks and lighter brake rotors. Have fun at the track, your car is ready. 

    Lineup

    The 2011 Mitsubishi Lancer DE ($14,995) comes with cloth upholstery, AM/FM/CD/MP3 with four speakers, power doors and windows, halogen headlamps. Air conditioning is optional. (All New Car Test Drive prices are Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Prices, which do not include destination charge and may change at any time without notice.)

    Lancer ES ($16,395) and ES Sportback ($16,795) come with a 5-speed gearbox or 6-step CVT with paddle shifters ($900). Standard equipment includes premium fabric upholstery, air conditioning, cruise control with steering wheel-mounted controls, power door locks with keyless remote, 16-inch alloy wheels, rear stabilizer bar, six-way adjustable driver seat, 60/40-split folding rear seatback with folding center armrest, front map lights, floor mats, the auto-up driver-side window, silver interior accents, body-color outside mirror housings and door handles, anti-theft security alarm and pre-wired Bluetooth. ES options include a power sunroof and 710-watt, nine-speaker, Rockford-Fosgate premium audio system. The Sport Aero Package ($800) and Sport Accent ($295) give it an Evo look. 

    Lancer GTS ($19,295) and GTS Sportback ($19,695) feature a 2.4-liter four-cylinder making 168 horsepower, rear disc brakes replacing the drums in the ES, a 5-speed manual gearbox or optional CVT (Continuously Variable Transmission) using Sportronic manual shifting with steering-wheel paddles. A 140-watt 6-speaker sound system is standard, along with sport bucket seats. New for 2011 is a FUSE Handsfree Links system, which ties voice command into all your worldly desires in the car, starting with talking on the phone. The sport-tuned suspension is tied to lovely 18-inch alloy wheels. 

    Lancer Ralliart ($27,495) and Ralliart Sportback get a 237-hp 2.0-liter intercooled turbocharged engine, while its suspension and brakes are upgraded from the GTS. It uses a six-speed twin-clutch automated manual called the TC-SST, with Normal and Sport modes. Automatic climate control is standard, along with sport bucket seats with unique fabric surfaces, and leather-wrapped steering wheel and shift knob. Also standard: six-speaker audio, aero package with front air dam, lower side air dams and rear spoiler, factory-installed fog lights, P215/45R18 tires on alloy wheels. Options include a Navigation & Technology package with GPS-based navigation system storing mapping data on a 40GB hard disk drive, with 10GB set aside for personally recorded audio files, to be played on the optional 710-watt 9-speaker Rockford-Fosgate audio system with Sirius satellite radio. 

    Lancer Evolution comes in two models, the GSR ($33,995) with 5-speed gearbox or the MR ($37,195) with 6-speed twin-clutch, plus BBS forged alloy wheels, Bilstein shocks, Eibach springs and big rear spoiler. Evo standard equipment includes automatic climate control, Recaro seats, 140-watt six-speaker audio system, power windows and locks and keyless entry, and Yokohama performance tires on 18-inch alloy wheels. Options include navigation, Bluetooth, 710-watt 9-speaker Rockford-Fosgate sound system, and HID headlamps. 

    Safety features for all Lancer models include front air bags, side airbags in front, side curtain air bags, a driver's knee air bag, and tire pressure monitor. Anti-lock brakes with electronic brake-force distribution is also standard, along with Active Stability Control. Front seatbelts have pretensioners and force limiters to help position users for maximum protection from airbags in crashes. Rear seats incorporate child safety seat anchors and tethers (LATCH). Available all-wheel drive enhances safety in slippery conditions. 

    Walkaround

    The Mitsubishi Lancer is a lovely car, even with its fish face. Mitsubishi calls it shark-like, but it's more like a largemouth bass. The nose seems to copy Audi's oversize grille, although the body-colored front bumper perfectly splits it up and minimizes the gaping mouth. And if the angular headlights were human, they would be exotic eyes. 

    The GTS is cleaner than the Ralliart, which outlines that mouth with a chrome ring, like silver lipstick on a fish. But the Ralliart has a cool aluminum hood with an inset scoop for the turbocharger intercooler, and two functional vents that do resemble shark gills. The Ralliart also has flared fenders that house low profile tires. The beautiful 18-inch alloy wheels, a 10-spoke wagon-wheel design, standard on the GTS and Ralliart, add an extra touch of class. 

    The angular taillamps have that same exotic-eye look as the headlights. They wrap around the rear edges of the car. The rear deck is quite short, and both the GTS and Ralliart have a spoiler wing that's so big it nearly fills up the trunk lid. It's not unattractive, but it is overkill. The GTS has one chrome tailpipe, the Ralliart two. 

    The Sportback body style has a properly discreet spoiler over the liftgate. Of all the 5-doors, namely Mazda3 and Subaru Impreza, the Ralliart's main rivals, the Sportback has the best-looking lines. The Sportback pulls off not looking boxy. Its silhouette is sharp and tidy, and the overall lines are really nice, unlike the more edgy Impreza. It's very handsome in Graphite Gray Pearl, and Octane Blue Pearl catches the eye. But Rotor Glow Metallic, a bright orangeish copper, is the prettiest color with the most creative name. Although we like Phantom Black too, even for $250 extra. 

    As for the Evo, the nose borders on brutish, with a deep spoiler that does double duty, shoving the onrushing air out of the way to keep the front tires firmly planted while forcing cooling air past a sporty looking mesh through the intercooler and radiator. Shark eye-like headlamps curl around the fenders in a stylistic optical illusion masking the longish front overhang. Functional, NACA-like ducts in the hood, like the chin spoiler, serve dual purposes, vacuuming hot air out of the engine compartment, both cooling the powerplant and reducing front end lift. 

    Interior

    There's nothing not to like about the interior of the Mitsubishi Lancer. The Lancer ES offers good rearward visibility, although the big rear wing on other models blocks a chunk of visibility out the rear window. 

    The sport bucket seats on the GTS are comfortable, afford an excellent seating position, and are made of a handsome rugged cloth. The steering wheel has one of the nicest leather wraps we've felt, and is the perfect size for sporty driving. The overall feel for the driver in the GTS is just right. This is another reason the GTS gets our bang for the buck nod. 

    The optional Recaro seats in the Ralliart seemed to us a bit too tight for everyday comfort. On the track they're terrific, however, so we liked having them on the Evo. 

    Cubbies and console compartments are good and plentiful, including cupholders between the front seats and in the front door pockets. 

    The dash design is graceful. The GTS interior is trimmed in faux carbon fiber, stylish and cleanly done. The gauges are tasteful, white-on-black with silver rims. The tach and speedo have eaves, a double-hump visor on the dash, that provide shade for the rectangular digital readout that's between them, so you can read its red letters in the sun. It offers the usual information, miles traveled and distance to empty and such, but it's most immediately useful to show, clearly and always correctly (unlike some), the gear you're in, when you have the 6-speed twin-clutch transmission in the Ralliart. 

    Both the Ralliart and the CVT are shifted with butterfly paddles behind the steering wheel, which are big enough to reach without moving your hands when you're holding the wheel in the 10 o'clock and 2 o'clock position. 

    Rear-seat room is adequate, relative to other cars this size. There isn't much knee room in the otherwise comfortable rear seat. The fold-down, center armrest in the ES and GTS is more stable than it looks, meaning everyday driving isn't likely to spill the kids' soda pop. In terms of roominess, the Lancer is comparable to that of the other cars in its class. Trunk space is also mid-pack. 

    The 710-watt 9-speaker Rockford Fosgate sound system sounds terrific; it's been upgraded from last year's 650-watt and 8 speakers and we found it delivered incredibly crisp highs. 

    Driving Impression

    The Lancer DE and ES 2.0-liter engine with variable valve timing is a good one, and so is the 5-speed manual transmission, so it's a very fun car. Although with just 148 horsepower, you have to stay on top of it because ample acceleration isn't always there. The CVT seems to rob some punch, but with the magnesium-alloy paddles working the 6-step CVT in manual mode, it still feels lively enough. 

    We found the Lancer ES smooth, spirited and sporty. Around-town handling is nimble, and cornering is taut at speeds inside the box. The ride is comfortable. Although the Honda Civic feels smoother and the Mazda3 more challenging. 

    The Lancer GTS uses a 2.4-liter engine with 20 more horsepower, and it's a big difference. It revs to a sweet 6500 rpm. You can relax at the throttle a bit. Brakes are nicely sensitive, and the 5-speed gearbox is positive, easy to shift with solid clutch action. There's enough power that you can definitely feel the front-wheel torque steer under hard acceleration. It's quiet and smooth on the freeway, where 80 mph feels like 70, and that's saying something for a small car with a four-cylinder engine. The eye-catching 10-spoke alloy wheels are shod with P215/45R18 Dunlop all-season tires. 

    The Ralliart brings all-wheel drive, and ups the performance ante. It uses the GTS suspension and brakes, upgraded a bit, with speed-rated Yokohama tires. It takes on an all-aluminum 2.0-liter intercooled turbocharged engine making 237 horsepower. There's only one transmission, the 6-speed Twin Clutch Sportronic Shift Transmission. The TC-SST is essentially a manual transmission without a clutch pedal. This twin clutch design now prevails as the method for shifting manual transmissions without a clutch pedal, either automatically or with paddles. Many are built by the German company Getrag, but Mitsubishi builds its own. 

    Surprisingly, the Ralliart's ride can sometimes feel too firm on the street and wear on you, especially when equipped with the optional Recaro seats. 

    The Ralliart's electronic all-wheel-drive system, which Mitsubishi calls All-Wheel Control (AWC), can be set for Gravel, Snow or Tarmac, but the system is not as encompassing as the Evo's Super All-Wheel Control. The Ralliart also lacks the Evo's track-ready suspension. So it doesn't handle like an Evo. When driven hard in slower corners, the Ralliart will understeer and even lurch as its tires try to bite the asphalt. This happens before the electronic stability control kicks in. The difference is apparently in the simple All-Wheel Control versus Super All-Wheel control in the Evo, plus the softer GTS suspension. 

    On the road with the Ralliart in Washington's Cascade Mountains, we found the Sport Manual mode worked exceptionally well in the TC-SST, providing sharper downshifts and quicker upshifts; and Normal Drive works so smoothly you can scarcely feel the relaxed upshifts. But Sport Drive confuses the transmission; it upshifts and downshifts at inconvenient times, inconsistently. The fourth possible mode, Normal Manual, is pretty much a contradiction, unless you just like to play with the paddles. So we preferred Sport Manual for sporty driving, Normal Drive for around town. We found that it takes a couple blocks on cold mornings for the transmission to shake off some sluggishness. 

    As for the 291-hp Evo, we think it's simply the best. The Evo X (as in 10) is heavier and has a bit less horsepower than its main rival, the Subaru WRX STI, but it feels more precise and nimble. You won't find a car that's more at home on the track than the Evo, especially not for less than $40,000. It's very easy to drive very hard. 

    More serious than the Ralliart, the Evo uses forged aluminum control arms, a quick steering ratio, and big brakes with four-piston front calipers, plus that higher level of stability control. The Super All-Wheel Control integrates all of the electronic dynamic controls, including Active Center Differential and Active Yaw Control in the rear differential. 

    Its TC-SST has an extra mode, called Sport Plus, for the track. You can turn the stability control entirely off, and it still feels balanced on the track, in this case Pacific Raceways near Seattle. We hit 140 on the sweeping bend on the front straight, and the Evo tracked steady where a lot of race cars do a scary twitch. The four-piston Brembos slowed it down to 70 for the turn at the end of the straight, quickly and without drama. And repeatedly, without fading. 

    Summary

    Mitsubishi has everyone covered in the compact class with the 148-hp Lancer ES for those with their minds on economy; the 168-hp Lancer GTS for those with spirit and an eye for value; the 237-hp Ralliart for those with a sense of adventure; and the 291-hp Evo for those with a need for speed. For 2011, there's a Sportback 5-door hatchback body style. The GTS is a compelling value for its price of around $20,000, fuel mileage, enjoyable driving characteristics, and good looks. If you don't need all-wheel drive, turbocharged acceleration, or rigid cornering, the GTS has the style of the Evo for half as much. 

    NewCarTestDrive.com correspondent Sam Moses drove the Lancer GTS in the Pacific Northwest and the Ralliart and Evo at Pacific Raceways near Seattle; Tom Lankard drove the Lancer ES in Santa Monica and Evo in Phoenix; editor Mitch McCullough drove the Evo at Firebird Raceway near Phoenix. 

    Model Lineup

    Mitsubishi Lancer DE ($14,995), ES ($16,395), ES Sportback ($16,795P, GTS ($19,295), GTS Sportback ($19,695), Ralliart ($27,495), Ralliart Sportback ($27,895), Evolution GSR ($33,995), Evolution MS ($37,195). 

    Assembled In

    Japan. 

    Options As Tested

    none. 

    Model Tested

    Mitsubishi Lancer GTS Sportback ($19,695). 

     

    2012 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution Information

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