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Mitsubishi 3000GT

Mitsubishi GTO
1991 Mitsubishi GTO Twin Turbo.png
Mitsubishi GTO Twin Turbo (Z16A)
Overview
Manufacturer Mitsubishi Motors
Also called Mitsubishi 3000GT
Dodge Stealth
Production 1990–2001 (Mitsubishi GTO)
MY1991–1996 (Dodge Stealth)
Assembly Okazaki, Aichi, Japan (Nagoya Plant)
Body and chassis
Class Sports car, grand tourer
Body style 2-door coupe
2-door convertible (1995–1996)
Layout Transverse front-engine,
front-/four-wheel drive
Platform Z15AM , Z15A, Z16A
Related Dodge Stealth
Mitsubishi Eclipse
Powertrain
Engine 6G72 3.0 L V6
  • SOHC 12v
  • DOHC 24v
  • DOHC 24v twin-turbo
Transmission 4-speed automatic
5-speed manual
6-speed manual (from 1994)
Dimensions
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 (3,090–3,770 lb)
Chronology
Predecessor Mitsubishi Starion (wide body)

The Mitsubishi GTO is a sports car built by the Japanese automaker Mitsubishi between 1990 and 2001. In most export markets it was rebadged as the Mitsubishi 3000GT. It was also imported and sold by Chrysler of North America as the Dodge Stealth captive import from the 1991 to 1996 model years with only minor detail/appearance differences; mechanically, the two cars were almost identical. The design was the result of the collaborative effort between Chrysler and its Japanese partner, Mitsubishi Motors. This differed from the two company's other collaboration, Diamond-Star Motors because both the Stealth and the 3000GT were assembled in Japan. The Japanese domestic market model took its name from the Galant GTO, a two-door hardtop coupé sold by the company in the early 1970s, which in turn exacted its name from a specific international endurance motor sport technical regulation, expressed in Italian as Gran Turismo Omologato.

In Japan, Mitsubishi's GTO was sold at a specific retail chain, called Car Plaza.

Following the successful showing of the Mitsubishi HSR and Mitsubishi HSX concept cars at the 1989 Tokyo Motor Show, Mitsubishi developed the new GTO as a technologically advanced 2+2 seater sports coupe to compete with the Honda NSX, Mazda Cosmo, Nissan 300ZX, Skyline GT-R, Subaru SVX and the Toyota Supra. They resurrected the GTO name, and the car went on to serve as Mitsubishi’s flagship for the remainder of the decade. However, despite the cachet of the badge at home, it was marketed as the Mitsubishi 3000GT and as the Dodge Stealth outside Japan; the company was concerned that connoisseurs would object to the evocative nameplate from the highly regarded Ferrari 250 GTO and Pontiac GTO being used on a Japanese vehicle. However, regardless of its badge or eventual target market, every car was built on the same production line at Mitsubishi's plant in Nagoya, Japan. Its introduction in Japan was during the softening of the Japanese economy, known as the "bubble economy" which had an effect on sales.


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Wikipedia

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