Wednesday, 2 October 2013

Evermore Monstrous: Mitsubishi’s Evo X Replacement


It’s hard to imagine the next Evo being much faster since the current X is so brutally quick. But with rumours circulating of a 500bhp hybrid replacement, a much faster successor is exactly what Mitsubishi is promising.


Even three laps in I can’t quite believe how quickly the needle climbs the speedo. Yes this car can hit 60 in under four-seconds, but he’s got an armful of lock on and we’re travelling through a corner. Before I can even brace myself we’re back over a ton and then onto the brakes, briefly, before he flicks the car left-right through the chicane, and it’s back onto the power again. We race down the straight, the engine singing its way up to 6500rpm, then swoop down into the banked left of Rockingham’s oval, still gaining momentum. I’m shoved sideways and back into my seat, and wince as we run within inches of the concrete wall at 120-something.

The car I’m sitting in, or clinging onto more like, is the big daddy of the latest Mitsubishi Evo X line up. This is the 2010 FQ400 model, which I was able to find out is fantastically fast thanks to a wealth of upgrades from the standard car. These include an uprated ECU, intercooler, turbo and racing spec injectors, enabling the FQ400 to stretch a phenomenal 400bhp from its lightweight two-litre engine, with a substantial 387lb-ft of torque available from impressively low down the rev range. Combined with a complex all-wheel-drive system, the Evo X can place brutal amounts of power down at almost all times, with intelligent electronics adjusting power accordingly to ensure the wheel with most traction is gifted the ability to really shove you out of the corners.

Revolution, not evolution

Performance like this from such a small engine was ground-breaking in 2010, and unsurprisingly is still very much ground-breaking today. Shocking news then that Mitsubishi has announced that this very car’s replacement, the Evo XI, will be significantly quicker and far more technologically advanced.

You could have been forgiven for expecting the Evo XI to take its name literally and be an evolution of the current super-saloon. Instead however, rumours circulating about the 11th generation of Mitsubishi’s famous car suggest a power hike of around 100bhp, with further reductions to weight and improvements to handling promising that this car is targeting battle with the current super-saloon heavyweight, the Nissan GT-R. The surprises don’t end there though, as Mitsubishi has hinted at the use of hybrid systems, utilising electronic technology from its Pike Peak rallying programme that has produced electric motors with over 500bhp. Instead of using full electric power however, the road-going Evo XI is likely to combine electric power with a turbo-charged four-pot engine.

Power will be placed onto the road using the carmaker’s Super-All Wheel Control (S-AWC), with electric motors aiding traction as well as boosting performance. In order to improve efficiency the Evo XI is likely to utilise several driving modes, with an all-electric mode expected to lower emissions further.

Styling will also take a radical new route, with Mitsubishi’s 2008 Concept-RA (shown in title-pic) being a main source of influence for the future car. Ditching the saloon like appearance, the Evo XI could be the first generation to take a far more aggressive styling stance and resemble a proper sports car.

A different class 

With the current FQ400 car providing such phenomenal performance from its compact two-litre engine, it is staggering to think that Mitsubishi is setting its sights on increasing power by another 100bhp. Such complex technology and ambitious performance targets can only mean a price increase from the latest model’s top of the range £40,000. But with the Nissan GT-R being a potential rival, perhaps Mitsubishi has plans to shift the Evo XI into the class above, competing with the likes of Ferrari’s 458 Italia and McLaren’s MP4-12C for raw track pace.

The next standard Evolution model is expected to arrive in showrooms in 2014, although the performance version is unlikely to arrive before 2016. This is likely to become the benchmark for its future rival, the Nissan GT-R’s successor, which is scheduled to arrive two years later in 2018.

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