Mitsubishi GTO
From All Car Wiki - Car Specification Wiki
| Manufacturer | Mitsubishi |
|---|---|
| Also called |
Mitsubishi 3000GT Dodge Stealth |
| Production |
1990–2001 (Mitsubishi GTO) MY1991–1996 (Dodge Stealth) |
| Assembly | Nagoya, Aichi, Japan |
| Predecessor | Mitsubishi Starion |
| Class |
Sports car Grand tourer |
| Body style |
2-door coupe 2-door convertible ('95–'96) |
| Layout |
Transverse front-engine, front-/four-wheel drive |
| Platform | Z11A, Z15A, Z16A |
| Engine |
6G72 3.0 L V6 • SOHC 12v • DOHC 24v • DOHC 24v twin-turbo |
| Transmission |
4-speed automatic 5-speed manual 6-speed manual ('94–'01) |
| Wheelbase | 2,470 mm (97.2 in) |
| Length | 4,600 mm (181.1 in) |
| Width | 1,840 mm (72.4 in) |
| Height | 1,285 mm (50.6 in) |
| Curb weight | 1,400–1,710 kilograms (3,100–3,800 lb) |
Contents |
Introduction
The Mitsubishi GTO is a sports car built by Japanese automaker Mitsubishi Motors between 1990 and 2001. In most export markets it was rebadged as a Mitsubishi 3000GT. It was also sold by Chrysler in North America as a Dodge Stealth captive import from the 1991 to 1996 model years with only minor detail/appearance differences, mechanically the two cars were identical. It took its name from the Galant GTO, a two-door hardtop coupé sold by the company in the early 1970s, which got its name from the Ferrari GTO, which means Gran Turismo Omologato.
Chassis Generations
Specifications
Gallery
References
External links
- GTO press release, Mitsubishi-motors.com, August 25, 1998 (Japanese)
- Mitsubishi GTO at the Open Directory Project