Skip to main content

Mitsubishi Shogun

With its faux-rally flared wheelarches, stubby nose complete with diamond-studded ‘Mount Fuji’ nose and hatch-mounted spare wheel, this new fourth-generation Shogun may look pretty much the same as before. But three-quarters of it is new, apparently. Like the new Outlander , it arrives here next March, and comes as a stretched five-door or short wheelbase three-door, running one engine – Mitsubishi’s familiar 3.2-litre four-cylinder turbo diesel.

An opportunity to hike prices?

No. There’s the familiar Equippe, Warrior and Elegance derivatives, and Mitsubishi will also introduce a topdog Diamond model, complete with big 20inch alloys, a lot of chrome and a different front grille. Despite these wholesale changes, prices remain unchanged, ranging from £22,949 for the three door entry-level Equippe to £34,999 for the new five-door Diamond. Expect the aggressive-looking long-wheelbase Warrior – the car we drove – to take the bulk of UK sales.

Should BMW and Mercedes be worried?

No, Mitsubishi hasn’t tried to glue faux wood and plastic chrome onto the Shogun, pretend it’s something it’s not, and pitch it upmarket to take on the M-class and X5. It knows its market too well. Mitsubishi’s biggest off-roader is just that – an authentic terrain buster, appealing to farmers, civil engineers, vets and anyone else wanting robust and reliable wheels that can take anything in their stride. In fact, the word ‘authentic’ popped every time someone from Mitsubishi opened their mouth at the car’s launch. Even the grab-handles on the A-pillars were called authentic off-road features… Shogun drivers may be a small band, but they are a loyal bunch, with seven in ten trading in their old Shogun for a new model.

Does ‘authentic’ mean ‘old-school’?

Well, yes, in as much as the Shogun is all about proper green-laning rather than wafting up crunchy Surrey driveways. But that doesn’t mean it’s only suitable for ploughing fields. Like its Land Cruiser and Pathfinder rivals, the Shogun runs a big capacity four-cylinder turbo diesel – there’s no petrol option because the sales numbers didn’t add up. The 3.2-litre unit, carried over from the outgoing model, is now fitted with a common rail injection system that boosts refinement, lowers consumption and ensures the engine meets Euro IV emission levels. And there’s a third of row of seats that folds flat into the floor when not in use. They’re for occasional use only – it’s a 5+2 not a seven-seater – but they’re easy to use and bearable for short trips.

And it will go anywhere?

Anywhere. With eleven Paris-Dakar rally wins under their dusty belts, Mitsubishi’s engineers know a thing or two about carrying on when the road stops. Point its blunt nose at any obstacle and the Shogun simply rolls up its sleeves and gets on with it. With its robust ladder-frame chassis, intelligent all-wheel-drive layout and optional locking rear differential, it’s all but unstoppable. Slot that transfer lever in low-ratio all-wheel-drive, ease the clutch out in first and with that torquey diesel just ticking over, the Shogun will clamber its way up, through and over anything. Little wonder the vast majority of UK telecommunication companies have them on their fleet for when they need to attend to remote transfer boxes and felled pylons.

But is it any good on the road, where it will spend most of its time?

With not a little power, a lot of weight and a ladder-frame chassis, you’re never going to set the alarm for dawn on a Sunday for an early morning blast. The Shogun does in-my-own-time very well. Anything else is a bit of a pointless struggle. For a start, its cabin is a bit of an eyesore – a random collection of seemingly unrelated dials, buttons and levers loosely held together by some unappealingly hard plastics, pretend wood that wouldn’t fool a blind man and leather from plastic cows. You sit perched up high, and driving the Shogun is a bit like driving a skyscraper from the top floor, with plenty of corner wallow, brake dive and acceleration pitch. Hooked up to the automatic box (you can have an automatic, but like the manual, it too only has five gears) it’s a bit rough and boomy, but gutsy enough for the job of lugging around 2255kg of metal. Its chuggy working-class character suits the Mitsubishi’s go-anywhere-do-anything nature. Just don't go chasing an X5.

Verdict

The Shogun – a blunt and slabby off-roading tool – may seem like an anachronism in today’s fragmented off-road market populated by sleek leather-wrapped cross-over sports utility vehicles. It’s not sporty - it has never been anywhere near the Nürburgring – doesn't make any extravagant boasts about its seating arrangement, and you only get two body styles and one engine. It’s simply an honest and straightforward car. If you want a big off-roader that actually goes off-road, it’s one to consider. It’ll do exactly what you’d expect it to do. No more, no less.

Popular posts from this blog

Lamborghini Canto – What the Murcielago could have been?

Back in the late 1990s, when Lamborghini were starting to realise they needed a replacement for the ageing Diablo, they started reviewing design proposals from various automotive design firms. Zagato’s offering was the Zagato L147 SuperDiablo, or as it was to be later known, the Lamborghini Canto. The Lamborghini Canto first appeared in 1998, it arrived only two years after another Zagato designed Lamborghini concept had been unveiled, the Diablo-based Raptor. The cars shared a number of similar features, including the wraparound windows, triangular lateral air intakes, and trademark double-bubble roof. However of the two, the earlier Raptor was probably the better looking. Clearly Ferdinand Piech – head of the Volkswagen Group – thought so too. After VW bought Lamborghini in 1999, one of his first decisions was to review the Canto’s development and redesign the concept. The car was re-engineered and the rear extensively restyled to include smaller air intakes. The engine was also up

Lamborghini Resonare Concept

The Lamborghini Resonare concept was created by 29-year-old Polish designer Pawel Czyzewski, it took him whole year to complete in exterior and interior details by using the Autodesk 3DS MAX software for modeling and rendering. According to Pawel Czyzewski, the main goal was to create a very futuristic, luxury, provocative and aggressive look, while still keep the Lamborghini style with the body line of the brand. Pawel Czyzewski was born in 1985 and currently resides in Lubin, Poland. He graduated from the University of Maria Curie-Sklodowska in Lublin and is focused on: Automotive Design, Industrial Design, and Interior Design. Some of the most successful projects of car concepts designs by Pawel Czyzewski include the: Gangloff Bugatti, Ferrari Invisum, Mazda Tamashii, Tricar Invisum, Arrano Invisum, Legarto Invisum and the Invisum among others. Have more information about this car than please comment us or email us at roadstrikersIN@gmail.com Thank you

McLaren P2 by Rakesh

The McLaren P2 is a concept created by Rakesh Bag , a Student of The Aditya Birla Public School , Veraval , Gujarat from INDIA The styling of the McLaren P2 is more attractive and less clinical than the McLaren P1 , but you can bet your entire worldly possessions on the fact every last millimetre of the bodywork has been extensivley analysed in the windtunnel. The front is unique and original, the way lower part of the bumper flows back into the ‘C’ shaped headlights is inspired. And the P2’s rear end has got to be one of the best in the business. Stunning. “the McLaren P1 and P2 will be the result of 50 years of racing and road car heritage. Twenty years ago we raised the supercar performance bar with the McLaren F1 and our goal with the McLaren P1 and P2 is to redefine it once again.” “Our aim is not necessarily to be the fastest in absolute top speed but to be the quickest and most rewarding series production road car on a circuit,” adds McLaren Automotive Managing Director Anton