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2002 Mitsubishi Lancer Cedia


2002 Mitsubishi Lancer Cedia
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Mitsubishi Lancer Cedia Problems
Not starting till u pour fuel in the throttle a...
2002, Mitsubishi cedia 4g15 Not starting until
u pour fuel in the throttle then dies off and n...
Mitsubishi lancer cedia
2000, Not starting, car misfire, only 3
cylinders working, found a little oil on spark
plug ti...
Revs
2001, When I start her she idles at 500 rpms,
and sometimes dies or she starts surging in
revs...

Engine size - Displacement - Engine capacity:1500 cm3
Transmission Gearbox - Number of speeds:Automatic
Fuel Type:Gasoline
Drive wheels - Traction - Drivetrain:FF
Price (out of date):$5500



2002 Mitsubishi Lancer Cedia specs, Engine size 1500cm3, Fuel type Gasoline, Drive wheels FF, Transmission Gearbox Automatic

The Mitsubishi Lancer is a small family car built by Mitsubishi Motors. It has been known as the Colt Lancer, Dodge/ Plymouth Colt, Chrysler Valiant Lancer, Chrysler Lancer, Eagle Summit, Hindustan Lancer, Soueast Lioncel, Mitsubishi Carisma, and Mitsubishi Mirage in various countries at different times, and will be sold as the Galant Fortis in its home market from 2007. It has also been sold as Lancer Fortis in Taiwan with a different facelift compared to Galant Fortis from September 15, 2007.

Used Mitsubishi Lancer Cedia

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Since its introduction in 1973 over six million Lancers have been sold.

The Lancer (LA series in Australia, where it was called the Chrysler Valiant Lancer initially) was first launched in 1973 and proved to be particularly successful in rallies, a claim that it retains to this day. At the time of its launch, Mitsubishi had the Minica kei car and the compact Galant, so the Lancer served to fill the gap in the small to lower-medium segment of the growing Japanese market. Twelve models were launched, ranging from a basic 1.2 L sedan to a more powerful rally-derived 1600 GSR model.

There were three body styles, 2-door coupes, 4-door sedans, and a rarely seen 5-door station wagon.

Celeste

In 1975, the Lancer was complemented by a hatchback coupé called the Mitsubishi Lancer Celeste (also called the Mitsubishi Celeste or Colt Celeste in some markets; it was the Chrysler Lancer Coupé in Australia and the Plymouth Arrow in the United States), and sold with 1.4 L and 1.6 L options (a 2.0 L model was added later).



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