Hold on a minute – isn’t that over 200bhp per litre for this Mitsubishi Evo X FQ-400?
It certainly is. Mitsubishi UK – just like the 330 and 360, this is a UK-only model – has stuck with the same 2.0-litre four-cylinder 16-valve turbo, but the company has hooked up with well-respected Japanese tuner HKS – a kind of Oriental Cosworth – to unleash even more power.
The extra go comes courtesy of high-flow fuel injectors; a new hybrid turbo that’s specially strengthened to deal with the faster turbine speeds and higher temperatures; a more capable intercooler; plus re-mapped engine management. Best of all, you’re still covered by the Mitsubishi three-year/36,000-mile warranty.
Come on, though, who needs an even quicker FQ?
Speed alone isn’t the point of the FQ-400 – it’s the way that power is delivered. You’d expect a small capacity turbo nutter to be laggy down low, yet it’s daily-driver tractable from very low revs, really picks up its heels from 2000rpm, then blitzes to the horizon from 3000rpm onwards.
It’s a more progressive delivery than the FQ-360 serves up, something that makes it feel a little more predictable, if not quite as banzai explosive as you might expect – though this is without doubt a very, very fast car.
Have they tweaked the chassis to cope?
Indeed they have. The 400 features new Bilstein dampers and Eibach springs for a 30mm lower stance, plus a slightly wider track and stickier Toyo tyres. The ride feels no firmer than the already borderline-firm lesser FQs, but the tweaks have upped agility and given the steering a more progressive, less darty off-centre response.
The brakes too – Alcons replacing the previous Brembos – are just a little less keen to respond instantly, something that sounds bad but actually means the pedal is easier to modulate in its first inch of travel. Stopping power is still totally reassuring.
Still looks like an Evo, though
It does, and the interior is virtually unchanged too – one of the car’s weaker points. That said, spotters will know you’re in something special – there’s a new bonnet, lightweight front bumper, composite re-styled rear bumper, a trapezoidal centre-exit exhaust and lightweight 18-inch wheels.
Verdict
To drop the same kind of money on an Evo as you would on a BMW M3 saloon does seem ludicrous, and even justifying the extra £10k it commands over the next most powerful is hard. Yet the FQ-400 is far more than an FQ-360 with the boost turned up – the dynamics have been carefully honed to offer a more together, more fluid driving experience than any other Evo X. It’s a brilliant drive.
If you want the ultimate Evo, this is it.