Road Beat: Mitsubishi Outlander GT, A high value alternative

When tested exactly three years ago, I called the Mitsubishi Outlander a high value, bang for the buck CUV. Now with compact, small-midsize CUVs all costing in the mid $30K range and more, the Mitsubishi stands out even more as my extremely loaded three rows of seats Outlander GT stickered for $36K all in including the boat from Japan. While the price is up a minuscule three percent, additional content and improvements have increased the value quotient. And that quotient grows as inflation would have boosted the price by at least six percent. So, for this Outlander, you essentially get an improved car for a lesser price.

Mitsubishi’s continually refreshed new Outlander is a great example of high value. First, are its looks. Its clean, simple shape has just enough detail and schmaltz to make it very pleasing to look at with a strong, well-done character line and superb window lines and shape done in perfect proportions with respect to the overall body. The front end is more detailed with new LED high/low beam headlight assemblies along with new upper and lower grille detail. It makes a smooth, rounded transition into the rest of the body. Anyone who doesn’t like its appearance could be labeled a Mr. Magoo. But a real positive is that you don’t have to be a Mr. Magoo to own one.

Outside dimensions put the Outlander into the category of a small-midsize crossover SUV with a length of just 185 inches or about five inches shorter than your average mid-size car. But at 71 inches wide and 67 inches tall it is of average dimensions. Wheelbase is 105 inches which is identical to the smaller Outlander Sport (172 inches long) and both share a front and rear track of 61 inches and identical widths meaning that both vehicles share the same basic chassis and running gear, except for the Outlander GT tested here which receives a 224 hp 3.0L V-6 instead a 166 hp 2.4L inline four shared by the other Outlander models and all Outlander Sport models. While the bodies are similar, the Outlander gets the better looks because of the stretch of 13 inches and third-row seating for two (small children).

Mitsubishi’s 3.0L SOHC, 24 valve V-6 has been in their stable for some time now and is one of the smoothest V-6’s in the business while creating a nice throaty sound. At full tilt boogie it will punch out 224 hp at 6,250 rpm with some serious mid-range torque which peaks at a low 3,750 rpm giving the throttle serious reflexes in normal driving. With a curb weight of 3,604 pounds (up 11 pounds) and a slick six-speed torque converter, paddle shifting automatic, it will scamper from 0-60 mph in a fairly quick 7.39 seconds. When I got my driver’s license, there were only a handful of production cars in the world that could do that.

With AWD and the V-6 comes a towing capacity of 3,500 pounds which should be equal to a 20-foot V-8 powered bowrider.

Passing performance is right on target considering the 0-60 mph time with a level 50-70 mph simulated pass taking 4.00 seconds and the same pass up a steep grade only slowing that time to 6.41 seconds. Even in aggressive driving, there is no “brownout” to be found here. The throttle is very responsive. My prior test from three years ago had times of 7.37/4.14/6.33 seconds demonstrating exacting production efficiency and tolerances. Mitsubishi builds them good.

If there is anything lacking, it is the fuel economy with EPA ratings of 20/27/22 mpg city/highway/combined. It proved to be about 10 percent better than that with the trick radar cruise control set at 70 mph as it showed an average of 30.2 mpg. Overall the Mitsu averaged about 23 mpg as the EPA number shows. In my 200-mile Carson City run over the Sierras the Outlander averaged 25.5 mpg in aggressive driving.

Those numbers are about average for most V-6 competitors in its class. According to the EPA, the four cylinder should improve economy by 3-4 mpg and FWD should add another MPG. And you should drive the four cylinder before buying the V-6. Its performance may surprise you as the CVT/four-cylinder power package does a nice job.

Suspension is state of the art MacPherson struts up front and a multilink system bringing up the rear. Both ends receive stab bars. Steering is an electrically powered rack and pinion but it is a bit slow at 3.3 turns lock to lock. Interestingly, the other models, all but the GT, get quicker steering at 2.9 turns lock to lock. Mitsu spent some time increasing structural rigidity and it shows as handling is sporty, with accurate steering, body roll control, good feedback and plenty of grip. It will dance with the best of them when darting through the twisties. Turning circle is a tight 35 feet. Great looking 18X7 inch alloys shod with 225/55 series rubber also increase driver confidence.

Another area of improvement is ride quality. It’s quieter, smoother and with less NVH than some competitors. It feels like an all-new vehicle. Spinning just 2,000 rpm at 70 mph there is no engine noise and with particular attention given to window sealing and other details, it is remarkably quiet with respect to wind and road noise.

\Safety is second to none, four-wheel discs, an alphabet soup of acronyms and with the GT Touring package (now just $1,000) you get forward collision mitigation, radar cruise, automatic high beam control and lane departure warning. Those new LED headlights were fabulous.

Now it gets better. The Outlander has a beautiful leather interior, in this case a tan, soft leather. The overall theme is sophisticated, yet simple luxury. Most all panels are soft touch, hard plastic need not apply. Shapes and function are well integrated into a very easy to use complete instrument panel. It doesn’t take a three-unit college course to get up to speed, with about the only “complaint” being the radio volume and tuning knobs could be just a bit bigger, but other than that it is easy to use with plenty of simple presets.

Oh, and those seats are very comfortable and with three rows and seven seatbelts it can carry the load with still over 10 cubic feet of cargo behind the third row. There are over 61 cubes behind the front row and 33 cubes behind the second row. That should satisfy most Home Depot runs. My AWD tester had a reasonable 15.8-gallon fuel tank. Front wheel drive versions get a 16.6-gallon tank.

Now here is the value, Pricing for this fully loaded, top of the line model is $33,195 plus the boat from Okazaki, Japan ($1,045). The GT Touring package, pearl white paint ($295), carpeted floor mats ($135) and some other small stuff brought the total to $36,700. That’s real value and Mitsu throws in a 5 year/60,000-mile bumper to bumper warranty and a 10 year/100,000-mile powertrain warranty.

Specifications
Price as tested $36,700
Engine 3.0L SOHC, 24 valve V-6 224 hp @ 6,250 rpm
215 lb.-ft. of torque @ 3,750 rpm
Transmission
Six speed torque converter automatic

Configuration
Transverse mounted front engine/AWD

Dimensions
Wheelbase 105.1 inches
Length 184.8 inches
Width 71.3 inches
Height 67.3 inches
Track (f/r) 60.6/60.6 inches
Ground clearance 8.5
Weight 3,593 pounds
Weight distribution (f/r) 58/42%
Fuel Capacity 15.8
Wheels 18X7 inch alloys
Tires 225/55X18 inch all season
Steering lock to lock 3.3 turns
Cargo capacity behind front row/second row/third row 61.0/33.0/10.3 cubic feet
Tow capacity 3,500 pounds

Performance
0-60 mph 7.39 seconds
50-70 mph 4.00 seconds
50-70 mph uphill 6.41 seconds
Top speedwell into triple digits
Fuel economy EPA rated 20/27/22 mpg city/highway/combined. Expect 23 overall in rural country driving 29-30 mpg on the highway at legal speeds.