Used 2017 MitsubishiLancer ES 2.0

 
    Exterior Color
    White
    Interior Color
    Black
    Odometer
    16,865 miles
    Body/Seating
    Sedan/5 seats
    Fuel Economy
    24/33 MPG City/Hwy
    Transmission
    Automatic
    Drivetrain
    Front-wheel Drive
    Engine
    I4 F DOHC 16V / FRONT WHEEL DRIVE
    VIN
    JA32U2FU0HU009299
    Stock Number
    11519NG
    Mitsubishi Lancer
    • Certified

    Included Packages & Options

    Included Options
    • Transmission: Continuously Variable$1,000

    Highlighted Features

    • Automatic temperature control
    • Wireless phone connectivity
    • Exterior parking camera rear
    • Speed sensitive wipers
    • Split folding rear seat
    • Remote keyless entry
    • Steering wheel mounted audio controls
    • Security system
    • Alloy wheels
    • Heated door mirrors

    Included Packages & Accessories

    • Intermittent Wipers
    • Power Sunroof
    • Front Wheel Drive
    • CD player
    • Power Adjustable Seat
    • Tilt Steering
    • Power Steering
    • Alloy Wheels
    • Power Seat
    • Anti-Lock Brakes (ABS)
    • Crew Cab
    • Trip Odometer
    • Power Brakes
    • Power Door Locks
    • Cruise Control
    • Cup Holder
    • All Wheel Drive
    • Power-Assist Disc Brakes
    • Air Conditioning
    • Power Lift Gates
    • Traction Control System
    • Engine: 2.0L MIVEC DOHC I-4
    • Transmission: Continuously Variable
    • ES Sun & Sound Package
    • Power Glass Sunroof w/Tilt & Slide
    • Radio: AM/FM Rockford-Fosgate Premium Sound System
    • SiriusXM Satellite Radio

    Detailed Specifications

    • 1-touch down
    • 1-touch up
    • Air conditioning
    • Automatic temperature control
    • Driver door bin
    • Driver vanity mirror
    • Front beverage holders
    • Illuminated entry
    • Passenger door bin
    • Passenger vanity mirror
    • Power windows
    • Rear beverage holders
    • Rear door bins
    • Remote keyless entry
    • Speed control
    • Tilt steering wheel
    • Alloy wheels
    • Four wheel independent suspension
    • Front anti-roll bar
    • Front tires: 205/60HR16.0
    • Power steering
    • Rear tires: 205/60HR16.0
    • Wheel size: 16"
    • 1st row LCD monitors: 2
    • CD player
    • CD-MP3 decoder
    • Radio data system
    • Smart device integration
    • Steering wheel mounted audio controls
    • Wireless phone connectivity: Bluetooth
    • Front center armrest
    • Front seats: bucket
    • Max seating capacity: 5
    • Rear seat center armrest
    • Rear seats: bench
    • Rear seats Folding position: fold forward seatback
    • Split folding rear seat
    • Cylinder configuration: I-4
    • Drive type: front-wheel
    • Engine liters: 2.0
    • Engine location: front
    • Fuel economy city: 24mpg
    • Fuel economy combined: 28mpg
    • Fuel economy highway: 33mpg
    • Fuel tank capacity: 15.5gal.
    • Horsepower: 148hp @ 6,000RPM
    • Number of valves: 16
    • Recommended fuel: Regular Unleaded
    • Sequential multi-point fuel injection
    • Torque: 145 lb.-ft. @ 4,200RPM
    • Variable valve control
    • Bumpers: body-color
    • Door mirrors: body-color
    • Heated door mirrors
    • Power door mirrors
    • Rear cargo: trunk
    • Turn signal indicator mirrors
    • Compression ratio: 10.00 to 1
    • Engine bore x stroke: 86.0mm x 86.0mm (3.39" x 3.39")
    • Engine displacement: 2.0 L
    • Engine horsepower: 148hp @ 6,000RPM
    • Engine torque: 145 lb.-ft. @ 4,200RPM
    • Exterior body width: 1,763mm (69.4")
    • Exterior height: 1,481mm (58.3")
    • Exterior length: 4,625mm (182.1")
    • Front hiproom: 1,354mm (53.3")
    • Front legroom: 1,074mm (42.3")
    • Front shoulder room: 1,389mm (54.7")
    • GVWR: 1,800kg (3,969lbs)
    • Rear headroom: 937mm (36.9")
    • Rear hiproom: 1,374mm (54.1")
    • Rear legroom: 917mm (36.1")
    • Rear shoulder room: 1,379mm (54.3")
    • Turning radius: 5.0m (16.4')
    • Wheelbase: 2,634mm (103.7")
    • Display: digital/analog
    • Exterior parking camera rear
    • Front fog lights
    • Front reading lights
    • Low tire pressure warning
    • Outside temperature display
    • Rear window defroster
    • Speed sensitive wipers
    • Tachometer
    • Trip computer
    • Variably intermittent wipers
    • 4 wheel disc brakes
    • ABS brakes
    • Brake assist
    • Dual front impact airbags
    • Dual front side impact airbags
    • Electronic stability
    • Ignition disable
    • Knee airbag
    • Occupant sensing airbag
    • Overhead airbag
    • Panic alarm
    • Security system
    • Traction control

    Standard Features

    • Power Glass Sunroof w/Tilt & Slide
    • Radio: AM/FM Rockford-Fosgate Premium Sound System
    • SiriusXM Satellite Radio

    Dealer Notes

    RAMSEY CORP IS HOME OF GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL! THIS VEHICLE COMES WITH 47 MONTHS OR 43,135 MILES FACTORY DRIVE TRAIN WARRANTY; EXTENDED WARRANTIES AVAILABLE. FAMILY OWNED, NO COMMISSION SALES, NATIONWIDE SHIPPING RATES

    Rear Parking Camera 
    2017 MITSUBISHI LANCER ES
    JA32U2FU0HU009299
    SEDAN 4 DR 2.0L I4 F DOHC 16V
    FRONT WHEEL DRIVE
    2017 Mitsubishi Lancer

    The Lancer competes with cars such as the Ford Focus, Honda Civic and Subaru Impreza. You can compare them here.

    Exterior & Styling

    The Lancer is not an ugly car and never has been. It's been an angular sedan since day one. The rest of the market, by comparison, moved to more of a jellybean shape — particularly the Focus — before returning to that more angular appearance (best observed in newer Imprezas). It's interesting, in the face of all that change, that the Lancer has remained what it has always been — and that it still looks good.

    The Lancer does, however, show its age in one area and once you see it, you can't take your eyes off it: The optional backup camera is located in a housing that sticks out from the rear of the car. Every other car in the U.S. market these days does a better job of hiding it.

    How It Drives

    The Lancer SEL I drove should not be confused with the Lancer Evo (or Evolution) of years past, which was more of a sports car. Our Lancer offered a relaxed driving experience with a smooth ride that could feel a little floaty, less connected to the road than the Civic or Focus. The Impreza offers the least smooth ride of this competitive group, but it feels more connected to the road than the Lancer.

    I spent some of my time in the Lancer driving off-pavement, across grass, and the Mitsubishi felt like it was made to do this. That's partly because of its all-wheel drive, but I also felt like the Lancer had greater suspension travel that allowed the car to work its way over the bumps at slow speeds rather than drive across the top of them as all its competitors do.

    Wherever it was driven, though, the Lancer wasn't quick. My test car had a continuously variable automatic transmission and a 2.4-liter, four-cylinder engine, which is the more powerful of two engine choices. The CVT provides good response. The worst CVTs have a weird, elastic response, but the Lancer's mimics a traditional automatic transmission in that it "kicks down" as if downshifting when you go to make a pass. It's not as good as the class-leading Civic's CVT, but it's at least as good as the CVT in the Impreza. (The Focus uses a dual-clutch automatic transmission.) Power, however, isn't the Lancer's strong suit; all the competitors in this class feel stronger.

    Rarely seen in cars these days, the Lancer has a switch to toggle between two-wheel drive, all-wheel drive and all-wheel-drive lock. The system works this way: In two-wheel drive, the Lancer drives the front wheels. In all-wheel drive, the torque split is as great as 50/50; while most of the power can go to the front wheels when needed, there will always be some power to the rear wheels and the car will never go into mostly rear-wheel drive. All-wheel-drive lock is something of a misnomer, as it changes the computer control of the system to become more aggressive in terms of how much power it sends to the rear wheels and how quickly it sends it there. It's not bad — it works — but it's different from most other systems.

    As far as handling goes, the Lancer is numb, offering little feedback and giving you little in the way of suggestion to go faster. It is predictable, though. There was a time when the Lancer was at the top of its class, but the rest of the class — especially the Honda Civic — has since passed it. Off the highway and in the city, the Lancer is very maneuverable; its turning circle is much tighter than its competitors — anywhere from 2 to 3 feet smaller. That might not sound like much on a spec sheet, but in real life you'll notice how easy it is to wind through a tight parking garage. I was pleasantly surprised and would rank the Lancer best among competitors in this regard.

    What also helps is that visibility inside the Lancer is good. The car is a basic sedan, but that means you're not faced — literally — with windshield pillars that tilt back toward you at a low angle. All in all, the Lancer is a pretty handy car to have in the city.

    The Lancer does, however, use an older, hydraulic power steering setup. Such a system was an advantage for many years because of the feel for the road it could provide. But now that automakers have nailed down electric power assist, hydraulic is less of an advantage for road feel and it requires more energy to power even when driving straight, so it burns more gas.

    Finally, the Lancer's steering wheel doesn't telescope, so it's harder to get comfortable. More than one editor reported having to sit so close to the steering wheel in order to comfortably reach it that their knees hit a hard trim piece. A telescoping wheel is standard on the Focus, Civic and Impreza.

    The Lancer is available with either a 148-horsepower, 2.0-liter or 168-hp, 2.4-liter four-cylinder engine, with either a five-speed manual or CVT and front- or all-wheel drive.

    Mileage figures range from a high of 27/35/30 mpg city/highway/combined, for front-wheel-drive models with the 2.0-liter four-cylinder and automatic transmission, to a low of 22/31/25 mpg for 2.4-liter, front-wheel-drive models with the manual transmission. We tested an all-wheel-drive version with the 2.4-liter engine. It returns 23/31/26 mpg combined and comes only with the automatic transmission. While inflated fuel economy estimates have been reported for Mitsubishi models in Japan, no discrepancies have been found in the U.S. to date.

    The Focus, Civic and Impreza also offer many different versions — including high-performance ST and RS versions of the Focus and a WRX version of the Impreza.

    Excluding competitors' high-performance versions, the combined mileage figure of 26 mpg for the Lancer SEL we tested falls behind the 30-35 mpg combined estimates for the Focus lineup, as well as the 31-35 mpg combined range of the Civic. The Impreza — the only car to offer standard all-wheel drive — also bests the Lancer, with 28-31 mpg combined. The higher figure reflects the automatic transmission.

    Interior

    The Lancer shows its age with the presence of round knobs to adjust the climate controls and radio (unlike the Civic's confounding lack of audio tuning knobs of any sort). As my dad, who's ridden in a few of my test cars, put it: "I think I could drive this car." And I have to say, the more I fiddle with "high-tech" climate controls on other cars, the more I appreciate the Lancer's straightforward design.

    The interior felt a bit pinched from side to side and that's not something I notice in other compact cars. I, too, had to sit closer to the dashboard than I normally would because of the lack of a telescoping steering wheel, but a small center storage bin and console meant I didn't feel claustrophobic. That was especially true because visibility is so good.

    Yet when I got in the Lancer's backseat with the front seat set for how I was driving, legroom was tight and my knees were raised more than I like. I'm 6 feet 2 inches tall, so taller people will want to spend some time in the Lancer — front and back — if they're thinking of buying one. Headroom back there was OK.

    Still, the center storage bin is small, as is the center console, so I didn't feel claustrophobic; doubly so since the visibility is so good.

    The quality of the interior is only so-so. Nothing looks really cheap, but nothing looks especially rich, either. The controls do feel a bit cheap, though; when you press a button, instead of the button surface going straight down, there's a slight wiggle. That just doesn't feel good.

    Ergonomics & Electronics

    For 2016, the Lancer adds a USB port. If you use your phone as a music storage device, though, it's just plain easier to select a song through the phone than it will be through the multimedia interface. The best example of this is that if you want to scroll through your artists or albums to find a particular one, you have to start at the top and scroll through each artist page by page until you find it. There's no swipe functionality to skip to a particular artist as there is on a phone ... or in most other multimedia systems.

    In this class, Ford Sync 3 is the clear winner as the best, most responsive system. The Subaru and Mitsubishi systems are pretty close in that they are reasonably easy to use and falter only when you use a phone as a musical storage device. Honda's system is a clear loser, both in the compact class and among multimedia systems in general.

    Also, the Lancer's satellite radio cut out more than in any other car I've recently tested. Yes, many systems are blacked out when you drive around tall buildings — as we often do around our Chicago headquarters — but the Lancer was most affected by this.

    Cargo & Storage

    The Lancer's trunk is a good size and carried everything I needed for a long weekend. There's a 60/40-split backseat, though there's no way to release the backrests from the trunk. You have to fold them by hitting a button that's inboard of the rear head restraints, but most other cars in the class also require this much stretching.

    Inside, there are a few useful cubbies, including a covered one just forward of the gear selector that was my favorite. All in all, the Lancer is OK in terms of in-cabin storage. It doesn't hold any real surprises.

    Safety

    The Mitsubishi Lancer is rated acceptable — the second-highest ranking available — in the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety's small overlap front crash test. It received the highest rating — good — in IIHS' other crash tests, but front crash prevention features are not available. The Focus scores the same in those same tests and doesn't offer front crash prevention, either.

    Both the Impreza and Civic received the Institute's highest safety rating and do offer front crash prevention systems. You can browse the Lancer's full list of features here.

    Value in Its Class

    The Lancer stands out as one of only two cars in the compact class to offer all-wheel drive. And after listening to some of my colleagues and myself rail for some time now against many of the newest touch-screen interfaces, I was surprised that, when confronted with the Lancer's simple rotary climate controls, the universal response was, "It's old."

    Perhaps there's no satisfying a car reviewer, but I do think the aging design of the Lancer does it no favors. It's not significantly cheaper than its competitors, but its lack of modern amenities suggests that maybe it should be. Other cars simply offer more features or — as in the case of the multimedia system — better execution of the same features.

    In the end, the Lancer limits itself to drivers who want or need all-wheel drive but don't like the all-wheel-drive Impreza, who desire a sedate driving experience with a comfortable ride, and who are willing to give up the driving dynamics and high-tech features of the Civic, Impreza and Focus.


    KBB.com Consumer Reviews

    Kelley Blue Book - KBB.com
    Overall4.5Out of 5
    • 15 years still going strong

      By Miranda on Thursday, February 16, 2023

      5.0
      I bought the Lancer ES brand new in 2008. Still driving daily. In 15 yrs I've only replaced the spark plugs in it. Best car I've ever had and will probably ever have. I've been looking at new cars recently and I just feel I will never find another car like this one.
    • Great Car, Easy to Maintain, Low Long Term Cost

      By TheCheapGuy on Tuesday, November 21, 2017

      5.0
      I am the first and only owner of my 2008 Mitsubishi Lancer ES. Ive done my own maintenance per the manufacturers schedule and owners manual. And I havent run into any major issues yet! Ive only had one minor issue two weeks ago. I had an engine oscillation issue where the car engine RPM speed would vary between 400-600 RPM at idle (~700 RPM is nominal) and the oscillations would become aggravated when the in-cabin fan (heat/AC) would be turned on. Ive had trouble finding repair manuals for the Lancer in auto-shops & online but found some you tube videos (in Spanish) where other Lancers had similar issues. The solution was to clean the throttle body with the butterfly valve open with carburetor cleaner. Afterwards, I turned the car on and the oscillations were gone! For good measure, I used Sea Foam Cleaner and Lube to help clear out the air intake system and see if that made a difference to my engine performance. I also decided to change my oil and replace the air and oil filter. I checked the spark plugs and noticed there was some oil residue on them. I checked the valve stem gasket and realized it wasnt providing a proper seal (cracked/dryrot) hence the oil on the spark plugs. I replaced that gasket. After all this, the car drove as good as new! As long as you treat the engine and transmission well, this car will last you a VERY long time. Disclaimer: I dont really care for luxuries, but the inside is nice in my perspective. The plastic interior has kept its shape and color over the years. I love the look of post 2007 Lancers. The paint on the rear right quarter panel is faded but I have no rust so far. The car is comfortable and the price I got it for was well worth the money. To me, there is no question that this car gets a 10/10 for quality especially when this car has never failed me. It has gone through numerous road trips and I will continue to travel with it as well! ALSO, the turning radius on this car is magnificent, especially in urgent U-turns. Haha!
    • Beautiful masterpiece

      By Ayden on Thursday, August 29, 2024

      5.0
      One of my favorite cars that I've owned. Its reliable, quick, sporty and fun to drive around. Overall a really good experienced car.