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SPD writes Car Of The Week: Week 4 - Mitsubishi Starion ESI-R
A real RWD Mitsubishi. That felt odd to say.
Ahh, Group B. Despite the trouble it came with, it was a hectic time full of excitement. Even though pretty much every manufacturer and their mum's gotten into the hype back in the 80s, I probably didn't realize Mitsubishi gotten themselves into it as well. Apparently, the Starion was the base for their attempt going into it. I can see why.
But I'm confused: the form it came with here is a Japanese RWD sports car, not the sort of madhouse rally machine like, umm, the Ford RS200. I'm sort of sure this trim isn't supposed to be the same line of business, but hey: this is my limited knowledge of the Starion, other than it being the only RWD Mitsubishi I can think of.
And since we're going down and dirty, I'm going to analyze in two ways. One for its road going performance, and the other for the dirt.
First glimpse of my incomplete Mitsubishi garage says I only have 1 already tuned (B class RWD rally). This be meaning I had a quick trip to the Autoshow, because people aren't willing to part with one for under 20k.
Let's go to today's road: a westbound, downhill descent from the top of La Gran Caldera, all the way to Descansar Dorado. Dorado means gold, so.. a sort of golden rock formations? I dunno. Anywho, this track is fun but demanding. It really tests a lot of aspects in an off-road rallying situation. We got tight roads, hairpin, speed sections, walled off chicane, and more. If we ride down this trail in an S1 car, you're practically going to beg your run will be clean.
But my first bunch of notes will be the Starion on the roads around, then on the way up La Gran Caldera, through the eastern paved road. Or you know: tandem drift zone. Was expecting a few drifters on the way, but there were tons (hah, tons) of Unimogs this week, surely anyone knows why at the time.
- I'm not expecting it to be exciting, powerful or anything. It's a budget, low powered (to today's standards), RWD sports car. And as that, the Starion does these traits splendid.
- The looks definitely catches my eye. It's so smooth and sporty. I'm not much for widebody kits, but this one is marvelous. Nothing feels forced on, except maybe the rear bumper.
- One thing to note is how it has this tinge of oversteer, with the rear sticking out notably in higher speeds. The car likes to expose the rear a bit when turning hard. This is good, especially for rally.
- For the heck of it, I tried going around certain drift zones around the map. It didn't have the power, but what was I expecting? What I didn't expect is it somehow managing to get a solid 2 star score in most of them. This is opportunity for a cheaper alternative to the AE86. It even has the looks.
- Even though it's a bit heavy, the car has a respectable torque figure that helps with uphill situations. The launch is surprisingly a fun excellent one due to this, defining the car being not your usual AWD Mitsubishi.
- Despite low figures, I know this isn't a car that wants to play it safe. It's not going to kill me, but if anyone was to raise it a few classes up, it definitely would. Tuners take note.
And.. there's no lava. THERE'S NO LAVA!
Let's go down to Montana Trail for the dirt analysis, that's probably where all the heat is at. What's on the cookbook today?
- For starters, this is a 4 minute-ish trail. Where there is length, there are bound to be moments where the track wants to mess you up. You gotta take your time to learn the various track features so you can predict what to expect.
- Launch off road is fine, so push it all the way. Don't feel any notable advantage for controlling the throttle this way.
- That small oversteer the car had on road stands out notably here off road too. Just this one trait makes this a great car for off-roading as is. Chalk that one up for the options this car can do.
- So far, what's notably bad is power and gearing. These on the stock car is not too suitable for higher level of dirt racing. But that torque helped with smoothing this bump, and not to mention the oversteer.
- Now for traction on the hairpins: a rally staple. This car can wipe out, sure. I particularly get this when I downshifted too much, or used the handbrake wrong. When it doesn't happen, this car loves to do these turns.
- There are parts of the track where it's optimal to go off the trail to get a better line. I'm sure that's okay in rallying standards. On this trail, there are quite a lot of opportunities for that.
What was my time?
I'm not sure how you all do this rallying stuff so well. After an hour of trying and testing, I got me a clean time of 4:04.830. Sad to say this car track combo was not my cup of tea.
But the car by itself is a whole different story.
Right now, I think I am satisfied with what's being offered, so I'll just go straight to the question.
What is the Mitsubishi Starion ESI-R? It is..
The rear wheel drive, road going 80's sports car from a sensible Japanese company, which also so happens to be related to their take on the least sensible rally racing league.
So far, this is the most solid Sleeper I've ever had to have the pleasure to say for so far. It didn't even take any kind of self deliberation: the fact that it had REAL torque, able to do burnouts, manageable fun oversteer.. possibly more! It already got my vote, be it on the tarmac or off it.
I'm already thinking of making a drift Starion too.. See! I don't do drift builds, and that's already a good first impression, am I right?
A real RWD Mitsubishi. That felt odd to say.
Ahh, Group B. Despite the trouble it came with, it was a hectic time full of excitement. Even though pretty much every manufacturer and their mum's gotten into the hype back in the 80s, I probably didn't realize Mitsubishi gotten themselves into it as well. Apparently, the Starion was the base for their attempt going into it. I can see why.
But I'm confused: the form it came with here is a Japanese RWD sports car, not the sort of madhouse rally machine like, umm, the Ford RS200. I'm sort of sure this trim isn't supposed to be the same line of business, but hey: this is my limited knowledge of the Starion, other than it being the only RWD Mitsubishi I can think of.
And since we're going down and dirty, I'm going to analyze in two ways. One for its road going performance, and the other for the dirt.
First glimpse of my incomplete Mitsubishi garage says I only have 1 already tuned (B class RWD rally). This be meaning I had a quick trip to the Autoshow, because people aren't willing to part with one for under 20k.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Let's go to today's road: a westbound, downhill descent from the top of La Gran Caldera, all the way to Descansar Dorado. Dorado means gold, so.. a sort of golden rock formations? I dunno. Anywho, this track is fun but demanding. It really tests a lot of aspects in an off-road rallying situation. We got tight roads, hairpin, speed sections, walled off chicane, and more. If we ride down this trail in an S1 car, you're practically going to beg your run will be clean.
But my first bunch of notes will be the Starion on the roads around, then on the way up La Gran Caldera, through the eastern paved road. Or you know: tandem drift zone. Was expecting a few drifters on the way, but there were tons (hah, tons) of Unimogs this week, surely anyone knows why at the time.
- I'm not expecting it to be exciting, powerful or anything. It's a budget, low powered (to today's standards), RWD sports car. And as that, the Starion does these traits splendid.
- The looks definitely catches my eye. It's so smooth and sporty. I'm not much for widebody kits, but this one is marvelous. Nothing feels forced on, except maybe the rear bumper.
- One thing to note is how it has this tinge of oversteer, with the rear sticking out notably in higher speeds. The car likes to expose the rear a bit when turning hard. This is good, especially for rally.
- For the heck of it, I tried going around certain drift zones around the map. It didn't have the power, but what was I expecting? What I didn't expect is it somehow managing to get a solid 2 star score in most of them. This is opportunity for a cheaper alternative to the AE86. It even has the looks.
- Even though it's a bit heavy, the car has a respectable torque figure that helps with uphill situations. The launch is surprisingly a fun excellent one due to this, defining the car being not your usual AWD Mitsubishi.
- Despite low figures, I know this isn't a car that wants to play it safe. It's not going to kill me, but if anyone was to raise it a few classes up, it definitely would. Tuners take note.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
And.. there's no lava. THERE'S NO LAVA!
Let's go down to Montana Trail for the dirt analysis, that's probably where all the heat is at. What's on the cookbook today?
- For starters, this is a 4 minute-ish trail. Where there is length, there are bound to be moments where the track wants to mess you up. You gotta take your time to learn the various track features so you can predict what to expect.
- Launch off road is fine, so push it all the way. Don't feel any notable advantage for controlling the throttle this way.
- That small oversteer the car had on road stands out notably here off road too. Just this one trait makes this a great car for off-roading as is. Chalk that one up for the options this car can do.
- So far, what's notably bad is power and gearing. These on the stock car is not too suitable for higher level of dirt racing. But that torque helped with smoothing this bump, and not to mention the oversteer.
- Now for traction on the hairpins: a rally staple. This car can wipe out, sure. I particularly get this when I downshifted too much, or used the handbrake wrong. When it doesn't happen, this car loves to do these turns.
- There are parts of the track where it's optimal to go off the trail to get a better line. I'm sure that's okay in rallying standards. On this trail, there are quite a lot of opportunities for that.
What was my time?
I'm not sure how you all do this rallying stuff so well. After an hour of trying and testing, I got me a clean time of 4:04.830. Sad to say this car track combo was not my cup of tea.
But the car by itself is a whole different story.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Right now, I think I am satisfied with what's being offered, so I'll just go straight to the question.
What is the Mitsubishi Starion ESI-R? It is..
The rear wheel drive, road going 80's sports car from a sensible Japanese company, which also so happens to be related to their take on the least sensible rally racing league.
So far, this is the most solid Sleeper I've ever had to have the pleasure to say for so far. It didn't even take any kind of self deliberation: the fact that it had REAL torque, able to do burnouts, manageable fun oversteer.. possibly more! It already got my vote, be it on the tarmac or off it.
I'm already thinking of making a drift Starion too.. See! I don't do drift builds, and that's already a good first impression, am I right?