???huh??? they made these shitty things for years. all mitsubishi's sucked till they made the lancer gsr even vr4 handle badly lots of body roll without aftermarket suspension, gear box were a horrible long shifts 2 but went well in a straight line lmao
That's the most beautiful car. I had a chance to drive it. Never had a better experience afterwords, even though I drove over 30 different cars from different classes. None of them was even close to the pleasure of driving Sigma
Mitsubishi used to make such nice cars back then. I have always liked the Sigma and it still looks great today. A shame the brand is now only a shadow of its former self.
You are right ! But it has to do with globalisation. My dealer just told me there is alliance of Renault,Nisan and Mitsubishi and they are planning to built cars together in the future on the same platform !
True....but 20 years ago you were lucky to get a steering wheel standard.....this had basically everything you can poke a stick at.....besides the lack of airbags and safety features but again back in the day that wasn't heard of....when you tell people the features this car has they don't really bat an eye....when you tell them it was made 22 years ago they soon pay attention...
+Alex Povolotski Well, that depends heavily on where you live. For instance german gets 11 different models and sweden gets 8 different models, the US gets 6 different models. And why is the Lancer or the Outlander not worth talking about? They aren´t supposed to be V8 Slaying Supercars.
Actually Nissan (read this: they will get out from Renault after Carlos Ghosn retires) took that 34% (yes, it's actually less than Renault's 44% of Nissan) controlling interest to ULTIMATELY ELIMINATE THE BRAND. Mitsubishi right now ('18) doesn't have much that is not available already in other brands, like Nissan (maybe some "green tech", Kei-class tech in JDM, which left Mitsubishi Auto into this predicament in the first place, and potentially SUV tech, but that's about it...). So letting it die in '20-21 won't be a great loss...
And this will be like a Brexit situation means that Nissan leaving Renault is absurd and may put an end on crazing towards such "Mainland European" b.s. just like what Brexit does since today is the second anniversary of the historic vote... :(
Then, tell that those who drive lousy-a** Toyotas and Mazdas and greedy-a** Mercs, Bimmers and V-Dubs (Audis as well) to shut their mouth up for ruining Renault (Nissan and Mitsubishi) but so does other fellow rivaling "Mainland European" automakers Fiat (Chrysler) and Groupe P.S.A. (Peugeot, Citroën and Opel). And it's Nissan who became the first and (East) Asian (Japanese) automaker to takeover a "Mainland European" automaker, the Chinese Geely went on to follow Nissan's footsteps and took over Volvo from Ford then similarly, Mitsubishi already took over by Nissan along with Renault (struggling for a CEO and to stop the Toyota, Bimmer and VW threat) and other (East) Asian automakers in my thinking/bet may be next to follow the footsteps of Nissan, Geely and Mitsubishi in order to influence the origins of some "Mainland European" automakers like Hyundai and Kia trying to take over Fiat Chrysler Automobiles N.V. (hence Hyundai-Kia is more stronger than #FCA), Groupe P.S.A. for Honda/Acura (Honda is strong as Hyundai while Groupe P.S.A. is less stronger than Honda) and more. :P
I drive the very Same model today build in 1995....I think these was the Best car from the 90's. I love these car ....very very comfortable until these days.
Mitsubishi was a great brand. They made reliable cars that was although funny to drive. This is all over now. I was a fidelized client of Mitsubishi and had 3 of then. The third was half the time in the garage for repairs. At demand to Mitsubishi "why my car is in this state", I received a letter of them with the response : "we will not answer". They are dead to me.
Back then when the Mitsubishi Sigma came out here in Germany and this was in March 1991 the 24V DOHC version was arround 62.500,- DM ! My regular Mitsubishi Dealer has invited me ,back then for the small introduction fest. But 62.500,- DM for this brand new model was far to much that I could afford. In 1995 I came to an used 12V Sigma with only 70.000 km on the clock. And after this we had two station wagons. Now I am also driving another 12V version which is a May 1991 so it is just officially a classic over here in Germany ! I own it for 11 years.
In April 91 I bought the very first Sigma in the UK directly from Colt Cars Cirencester - reg H929 KAD. I am still a techie freak and bought the car based on all the buttons and graphic equalizer. Its biggest fault was the front discs warping and needing skimming (or replacing) every few months. CCC used to drive over to Chippenham and pick it up at 8am, returning it early afternoon with the brakes working perfectly. I had if for 3 years and sold it with 95,000 miles on it to a guy in Herne Bay. #goodold days
Cars these days look a lot more similar than they did back in the 80s and early 90s. The reason being is a car's design is governed by many different aspects. Crumple zones, aerodynamics, ride height, headlamp height, bumper sizes and so forth. Every major car manufacturer is able to ascertain more or less the perfect shape for all of these, so they all work off this and make small variations.
You can also call it by its original Japanese badging "Diamante" since it translates to "Diamond" in Portuguese, which is fitting for the good ol' reliable Sigma (F16A). It's available either FWD or AWD (the latter's recommended for better traction).
I totally with all the people that commented the following things: -He sounds like James May -It's unbelievable how much more childish he is now (for the better) -I want a Sigma now, and I shouldn't.
Jeremy Clarkson always impressed me with his knowledge of the industry & of issues such as what real quality in cars is . Yes he was a stirrer part of his appeal . I miss him and the show, often very funny always informative.
I’m sure Mitsubishi’s marketing department gave him a hymn sheet to sing from when filming this. It’s only at the very end that he would give his overall opinion of the vehicle. But this was a time when he was not as popular as he is now.
@@beagle7622 which is why he can be so blunt now with cars he truly doesnt like, no need for polite formalities. He's been popular(on a global scale) since the mid 2000's.
Once you look at adding leather, sunroof, premium sound your looking at calais-V price range Still, my $100K price tag was a bit optimistic. I sometimes forget it's 2013 and not 1998.
i guess when he got older, he got bored reporting what the car maker want him to say and he then became Jeremy that we know now :). that car bring me a lot of memories :)
So much better this old format of Top Gear. Actually reviewing cars and being informative rather than just beimg silly like strapping a makeshift caravan to the top of it or dropping a grand piano on the roof......
You thought Mercedes over built the shit out their cars. Mitsubishi built the hell out of everything back in the late 80s early 90s. Cars, boats, TVs...you name it. They made literally everything.
Very early days Jeremy while he was still getting his feet in the door of the bbc. Once he was established, the 'pronounced association' went out of the window.
That's what it looks like (SPONSORED CONTENT, as they would call it nowadays...). The one review one year before for the same Sigma / Diamante is the REAL DEAL.
Many MANY similarity's! Sigma got the Diamante IRS rear end, plus the DOHC engine and the Diamante style one piece dash and diamante style door trims and seats.
I watch the video expecting a tongue-in-cheek comment and snark every 10 seconds. I never gotten one for 21 minutes and 36 seconds. Is this the same Jeremy Clarkson as that bloke who is in Top Gear today?
Not sure why I'm insane. I agree with you. Car's these days lack a personality. they all feel too repetitive, I'm not a great wordsmith but you get the jist.
Gold years for Mitsubishi. I’m owner of an asx/outlander RVR. Good car. Nothing fancy. Really comfortable. But the actual brand it’s not good as the brand in 80s and 90s that make car like the 3000GT, the evos, sigma, eclipse, galant and fto. Now there are only suv and they don’t seems interested to compete in some racing class anymore. Ralliart make only cosmetic modifications. What a shame for all that legacy that the brand have.
They rebadged them as Magna here in Australia as the original Sigma’s were panned by motoring journalists of the time. They were renowned for oil ring wear and valve stem seal wear and high oil consumption being labeled the Mitsubishi Stigma by many. They were ahead of their time in so many ways and if looked after and not thrashed they were a reliable car.
These were NOT rebadged as Magnas in Australia. They were totally re-designed for our market, we got entirely new rear suspension, different interior, and most importantly, two different engines. Not close to being a re-badge
@@dodgeviper89 were they? I knew about the suspension difference. They had the same body, same interior and a FWD V6 Here’s what I found online about the Australian version In Australia, the second generation (1991-1996) inherited the already wide-body Japanese Mitsubishi Sigma platform on which it was based with the Astron II 4 cylinder and the Japan and Europe released Cyclone 3.0 Litre FWD V6 with either the INVECS 4 speed Automatic Transmission or 5 speed manual transmission. As Australian built Sigma’s ceased in the mid 1980’s Mitsubishi Australia opted to use the Magna nameplate used on the Australian built 1st generation (1985-1991) Magna instead of the Japanese and Europe badged Sigma and Diamante. The luxury model carried the Verada nameplate in both Australia and New Zealand
@@GODEES77 They were different. I've still got a 1993 magna, owned two 1st generation Diamante's, wrecked 4 1st generation Diamante's and pull apart close to 30 TR magnas. Interior is close - I have a set of German spec Sigma doorcards which I imported. Speakers are moved halfway up the doors - all Magna/veradas had them located at the bottom. So the front door inner skins are 100% different. Rear doors are the same inside and out. Dashboard - magnas got a half plastic/half squishy dash. All Sigma's/Diamante's got a one piece squishy dash. All little things to cut costs to keep the cost in line with it's competition of the time. All Sigma Wagons were built in Australia and exported. But yeah. Extremely close. But they were simply not a rebadge. ALOT was changed to make it suitable for local markets
The 6G7x Cyclone engines do burn oil. The Australian market only had 12V engines, the SOHC version. The DOHC was introduced in 1996 on the Diamante based Magna.
this was a "Magna" in Australia..usually without TCL fitted. This variant was deadly on gravel roads - the rear end swung out on bends uncontrollably due to the large weight of the V6 engine up front
My soul died during this video...and I'm sure Clarkson's did to. He was as pedantic as James May. Safety is boring and boring equals death. Its no wonder why all he does is powerslides on Top Gear now.
7:50 - _“In Britain, it is illegal for the driver of a car to have visual reference of a TV screen while driving”_ I believe the reason why it’s illegal is because it would be too distracting to the driver, when they are supposed to be concentrating firmly on the road ahead.
Had the great pleasure of driving one many years ago. I loved it for what it was. I also owned a 1998 Galant v6 SW. Great, great car. But rust was a issue. Anyway. Mitsubishi is the most boring car company in the world now. What a shame.
how detailed were these car reviews, and you got to see what you were buying, today all everyone is interested is CO2 emissions and all because of regulations...also difference in Top Gear, useful features in the car then to useful features to do with the car(blow it up) :D not that i disprove
In Australia, this car was known as 'Magna' and they where trashy variants, only the Verada was luxurious. Camry was still a better quality competitor.
Different various aimed at different buyers. Fleet = GLX. Everyday consumer, Executive, want a smidge more luxury? = SE. Or full verada. Remember over here they were designed to complete with Falcon/Fairmont and Commodore/Calaise, Overseas they were designed to compete with BMW and Mercedes
Jezza in a collar and tie. You can tell he's on a serious earner but hasn't yet been fully paid. Rather than the regular pocket moeny he got from the beeb or bonus from amazon and then allowed to say whatever he likes. Almost.
Funny hey, you can totally tell he's reading off cue cards! It's funny though because in a later review he does for Topgear in 1991 he does bag it out quite a bit.....
It was called a Magna in Australia, poor sales in Australia led to Mitsubishi closing down Australian based production. (Is that really Jeremy Clarkson)
I'd rather have the Starion they used on the slippy uphill start for an example, may have less gadgets and features but so much more nicer to look at in my opinion.
Everyone has there own tastes I know, but in my opinion there are very few modern cars that look really good, Compare the Ferrari 430 with the 288GTO or 308 from the 1980's. Modern cars are too restricted my safety regulations; they all have to be of a certain height, have crumple zones and wing mirrors that don't harm pedestrians if you run them over. I like some modern cars but very few compared with those from the 70's 80's and early 90's.
The truest sigma male 💪🏻
The Mitsubishi Sigma vs the Lancia Beta
good old mitsutimes. What a shame that mitsubishi doesnt make cars like this anymore
I know sad.....
mitsubishi is now just a shadow of its former self
Make Mitsubishi great again!
Kyle Soler hehe yeah
Kyle Soler i agree
???huh??? they made these shitty things for years. all mitsubishi's sucked till they made the lancer gsr even vr4 handle badly lots of body roll without aftermarket suspension, gear box were a horrible long shifts 2 but went well in a straight line lmao
That's the most beautiful car. I had a chance to drive it. Never had a better experience afterwords, even though I drove over 30 different cars from different classes. None of them was even close to the pleasure of driving Sigma
I still drive it. Its 30 years old by now.
I can say the same and that's why I drive one again. 05/1991 231tkm by now.Love it !
This Jeremy Clarkson was the best version of Jeremy Clarkson. What a professional and knowledgeable chap. Impressive.
Mitsubishi used to make such nice cars back then. I have always liked the Sigma and it still looks great today. A shame the brand is now only a shadow of its former self.
There’s still a few of these rattling around Australia. All of them have exhaust smoke pouring from them.
You are right ! But it has to do with globalisation. My dealer just told me there is alliance of Renault,Nisan and Mitsubishi and they are planning to built cars together in the future on the same platform !
@@jamesmcgowen1769 Oh I still have one in America-a 2003 model with every option and it's quite dependable even after 200k miles.
@@chazzcoolidge2654 an ‘03 model? I’ll have to google what they look like
Cheers
@@jamesmcgowen1769 Oh thanks! It's the 2nd to last model year they were sold here! It'll be a future classic,I hope.
I have always wanted a Diamanté since I briefly drove a 1991 model. Butter smooth, stunningly beautiful interior.
Had a car like it, reliable and turned heads everywhere - pearl white. Sold it way too soon. It was a 1992, and saw it for sale in 2010.
he had so much class back then
A truly beautiful & advanced car for its day:)
True....but 20 years ago you were lucky to get a steering wheel standard.....this had basically everything you can poke a stick at.....besides the lack of airbags and safety features but again back in the day that wasn't heard of....when you tell people the features this car has they don't really bat an eye....when you tell them it was made 22 years ago they soon pay attention...
Where are all those fine Mitsubishi cars now? Mitsu offers a measly 3-4 models in N.America these days and none of them are worth talking about it.
+Alex Povolotski Well, that depends heavily on where you live. For instance german gets 11 different models and sweden gets 8 different models, the US gets 6 different models. And why is the Lancer or the Outlander not worth talking about? They aren´t supposed to be V8 Slaying Supercars.
Renault-Nissan Alliance bought it, don't you think?
Actually Nissan (read this: they will get out from Renault after Carlos Ghosn retires) took that 34% (yes, it's actually less than Renault's 44% of Nissan) controlling interest to ULTIMATELY ELIMINATE THE BRAND.
Mitsubishi right now ('18) doesn't have much that is not available already in other brands, like Nissan (maybe some "green tech", Kei-class tech in JDM, which left Mitsubishi Auto into this predicament in the first place, and potentially SUV tech, but that's about it...). So letting it die in '20-21 won't be a great loss...
And this will be like a Brexit situation means that Nissan leaving Renault is absurd and may put an end on crazing towards such "Mainland European" b.s. just like what Brexit does since today is the second anniversary of the historic vote... :(
Then, tell that those who drive lousy-a** Toyotas and Mazdas and greedy-a** Mercs, Bimmers and V-Dubs (Audis as well) to shut their mouth up for ruining Renault (Nissan and Mitsubishi) but so does other fellow rivaling "Mainland European" automakers Fiat (Chrysler) and Groupe P.S.A. (Peugeot, Citroën and Opel).
And it's Nissan who became the first and (East) Asian (Japanese) automaker to takeover a "Mainland European" automaker, the Chinese Geely went on to follow Nissan's footsteps and took over Volvo from Ford then similarly, Mitsubishi already took over by Nissan along with Renault (struggling for a CEO and to stop the Toyota, Bimmer and VW threat) and other (East) Asian automakers in my thinking/bet may be next to follow the footsteps of Nissan, Geely and Mitsubishi in order to influence the origins of some "Mainland European" automakers like Hyundai and Kia trying to take over Fiat Chrysler Automobiles N.V. (hence Hyundai-Kia is more stronger than #FCA), Groupe P.S.A. for Honda/Acura (Honda is strong as Hyundai while Groupe P.S.A. is less stronger than Honda) and more. :P
I drive the very Same model today build in 1995....I think these was the Best car from the 90's. I love these car ....very very comfortable until these days.
Where do you live? I seek one of these to try. Ive got a galant from 91 and i love it
The styling changed in 1995
Mitsubishi was a great brand. They made reliable cars that was although funny to drive. This is all over now. I was a fidelized client of Mitsubishi and had 3 of then. The third was half the time in the garage for repairs. At demand to Mitsubishi "why my car is in this state", I received a letter of them with the response : "we will not answer".
They are dead to me.
Back then when the Mitsubishi Sigma came out here in Germany and this was in March 1991 the 24V DOHC version was arround 62.500,- DM ! My regular Mitsubishi Dealer has invited me ,back then for the small introduction fest. But 62.500,- DM for this brand new model was far to much that I could afford. In 1995 I came to an used 12V Sigma with only 70.000 km on the clock. And after this we had two station wagons. Now I am also driving another 12V version which is a May 1991 so it is just officially a classic over here in Germany ! I own it for 11 years.
In April 91 I bought the very first Sigma in the UK directly from Colt Cars Cirencester - reg H929 KAD. I am still a techie freak and bought the car based on all the buttons and graphic equalizer. Its biggest fault was the front discs warping and needing skimming (or replacing) every few months. CCC used to drive over to Chippenham and pick it up at 8am, returning it early afternoon with the brakes working perfectly. I had if for 3 years and sold it with 95,000 miles on it to a guy in Herne Bay. #goodold days
Mate that's weird, never heard of them warping front discs! Falcons on the other hand.....
95k miles in 3 years? That's impressive!
@@64bakes I was an IT consultant working all over the UK @ 63p/mile fixed travel allowance. Quids in! 😉
Is it still alive?
Cars these days look a lot more similar than they did back in the 80s and early 90s. The reason being is a car's design is governed by many different aspects. Crumple zones, aerodynamics, ride height, headlamp height, bumper sizes and so forth. Every major car manufacturer is able to ascertain more or less the perfect shape for all of these, so they all work off this and make small variations.
Great vid. Far cry from what they are today.
WE’VE COME FULL CIRCLE BOIZ
A Sigma Car for the Sigma Male.
You can also call it by its original Japanese badging "Diamante" since it translates to "Diamond" in Portuguese, which is fitting for the good ol' reliable Sigma (F16A). It's available either FWD or AWD (the latter's recommended for better traction).
I own one for like 7 years now, perfection.
I totally with all the people that commented the following things:
-He sounds like James May
-It's unbelievable how much more childish he is now (for the better)
-I want a Sigma now, and I shouldn't.
Too gear was a different format then. His being a fool is what made his version of Top gear so popular
I have a 1990 Japanese Import Mitsubishi Diamante 30R-SE 4WD. Top trim, runs so good, with looks to match!
A car I wanted but couldn't afford at the time. Yet it was better than all the cars he was comparing with
Jeremy Clarkson always impressed me with his knowledge of the industry & of issues such as what real quality in cars is . Yes he was a stirrer part of his appeal . I miss him and the show, often very funny always informative.
I’m sure Mitsubishi’s marketing department gave him a hymn sheet to sing from when filming this. It’s only at the very end that he would give his overall opinion of the vehicle. But this was a time when he was not as popular as he is now.
@@paulsz6194 Absolutely but he had to start somewhere.
@@beagle7622 which is why he can be so blunt now with cars he truly doesnt like, no need for polite formalities. He's been popular(on a global scale) since the mid 2000's.
Once you look at adding leather, sunroof, premium sound your looking at calais-V price range
Still, my $100K price tag was a bit optimistic. I sometimes forget it's 2013 and not 1998.
i guess when he got older, he got bored reporting what the car maker want him to say and he then became Jeremy that we know now :). that car bring me a lot of memories :)
This is better than any Mitsubishi brochure 😂 Best Mitsu pitch ever.
That was my dad's car... I learn to drive on it. I miss it! Thank you for this video :)
same engine as my 3000GT VR4 from 20 years ago.
lol maybe in fantasyland
Wrong. Not the same engine. Derrrrrrrrr.
6G72 24v DOHC, Same engine.One has turbochargers, one does not.
dodgeviper89 that would seem to be a big difference there bob! what do you say? "yep! probably different internals, compression, etc too!"
I stand by my statement. 6G72 DOHC 24v.I do understand your point of view however.
So much better this old format of Top Gear.
Actually reviewing cars and being informative rather than just beimg silly like strapping a makeshift caravan to the top of it or dropping a grand piano on the roof......
Mitsubishi was king in the 1990's
very nice car
will soon be available, would love to see this in the showroom.
Cars today rarely get unlimited mileage warranty at all, if ever. UNLIMITED miles in 3 years. They had faith in their engineering.
You thought Mercedes over built the shit out their cars. Mitsubishi built the hell out of everything back in the late 80s early 90s. Cars, boats, TVs...you name it. They made literally everything.
God I wish I was born 20 years earlier. So many interesting AND reliable cars. Today's cars are all blant and/or unreliable.
What kind of jeremy clarkson is this?
James May
A typical
Lachlan Cook V.1 clarkson.
Very early days Jeremy while he was still getting his feet in the door of the bbc. Once he was established, the 'pronounced association' went out of the window.
Just out of charm school
He looks so young!
Haven't ever seen Clarkson this serious before, lol :D
Clarkson had better times too, like Mitsubishi.
Thank you for the commercial
That's what it looks like (SPONSORED CONTENT, as they would call it nowadays...). The one review one year before for the same Sigma / Diamante is the REAL DEAL.
Beautiful car and video 👍🏼
Many MANY similarity's! Sigma got the Diamante IRS rear end, plus the DOHC engine and the Diamante style one piece dash and diamante style door trims and seats.
Hmm I though stability control was first introduced in 1995 S600, turns out it was Sigma/Diamante
I watch the video expecting a tongue-in-cheek comment and snark every 10 seconds. I never gotten one for 21 minutes and 36 seconds.
Is this the same Jeremy Clarkson as that bloke who is in Top Gear today?
Sad to see how Mitsubishi ended up
Dam jdm cars were so complex back then.
The best Mitsubishi I had!
Now I love my Pajero🙃
Not sure why I'm insane. I agree with you. Car's these days lack a personality. they all feel too repetitive, I'm not a great wordsmith but you get the jist.
I honestly can't take Jeremy seriously with how serious he is in this video compared to Top Gear.
bloody hell clarkson.... you look so well!
Dear God the music... It's like a pensioner broke wind...
Mitsubishi that has true grindset
The classical music in the background cracks me up!! It's a Mitsubishi review not a freakin Rolls Royce!! LOL.....
The beat car ever we have it over 18 years
Gold years for Mitsubishi. I’m owner of an asx/outlander RVR. Good car. Nothing fancy. Really comfortable. But the actual brand it’s not good as the brand in 80s and 90s that make car like the 3000GT, the evos, sigma, eclipse, galant and fto. Now there are only suv and they don’t seems interested to compete in some racing class anymore. Ralliart make only cosmetic modifications. What a shame for all that legacy that the brand have.
i didn't know he did ads for car manufacturers
Want to see the other cars as well. Cool throwback.
That is the same engine as the 3000GT. Sexy!
Compare this to literally any Doug demuro video and see how clueless the average car buyer has become since the 90s
They rebadged them as Magna here in Australia as the original Sigma’s were panned by motoring journalists of the time. They were renowned for oil ring wear and valve stem seal wear and high oil consumption being labeled the Mitsubishi Stigma by many. They were ahead of their time in so many ways and if looked after and not thrashed they were a reliable car.
These were NOT rebadged as Magnas in Australia. They were totally re-designed for our market, we got entirely new rear suspension, different interior, and most importantly, two different engines. Not close to being a re-badge
@@dodgeviper89 were they? I knew about the suspension difference. They had the same body, same interior and a FWD V6
Here’s what I found online about the Australian version
In Australia, the second generation (1991-1996) inherited the already wide-body Japanese Mitsubishi Sigma platform on which it was based with the Astron II 4 cylinder and the Japan and Europe released Cyclone 3.0 Litre FWD V6 with either the INVECS 4 speed Automatic Transmission or 5 speed manual transmission. As Australian built Sigma’s ceased in the mid 1980’s Mitsubishi Australia opted to use the Magna nameplate used on the Australian built 1st generation (1985-1991) Magna instead of the Japanese and Europe badged Sigma and Diamante. The luxury model carried the Verada nameplate in both Australia and New Zealand
@@GODEES77 They were different. I've still got a 1993 magna, owned two 1st generation Diamante's, wrecked 4 1st generation Diamante's and pull apart close to 30 TR magnas.
Interior is close - I have a set of German spec Sigma doorcards which I imported. Speakers are moved halfway up the doors - all Magna/veradas had them located at the bottom. So the front door inner skins are 100% different.
Rear doors are the same inside and out.
Dashboard - magnas got a half plastic/half squishy dash. All Sigma's/Diamante's got a one piece squishy dash. All little things to cut costs to keep the cost in line with it's competition of the time.
All Sigma Wagons were built in Australia and exported.
But yeah. Extremely close.
But they were simply not a rebadge. ALOT was changed to make it suitable for local markets
The 6G7x Cyclone engines do burn oil. The Australian market only had 12V engines, the SOHC version. The DOHC was introduced in 1996 on the Diamante based Magna.
this was a "Magna" in Australia..usually without TCL fitted. This variant was deadly on gravel roads - the rear end swung out on bends uncontrollably due to the large weight of the V6 engine up front
This model, in "Magna" form NEVER had TCL. Sigma, DIamante yes, Magna, no.
This was the diamanté in the States literally the same car.
I know that is Jeremy Clarkson. But that ain't Clarkson.
My soul died during this video...and I'm sure Clarkson's did to. He was as pedantic as James May. Safety is boring and boring equals death. Its no wonder why all he does is powerslides on Top Gear now.
Gawd that was 8 solid minutes about traction control. A feature that takes the fun out of most good cars. Makes ‘em safer, but still.
Trace Control Logic is dreadful.
Kills engine power when you need it most. No way it's safe in some situations.
Clatkson is essentially a brochure reader here. No wonder that with time he became a monster whose intelligence scares most, including him.
7:50 - _“In Britain, it is illegal for the driver of a car to have visual reference of a TV screen while driving”_
I believe the reason why it’s illegal is because it would be too distracting to the driver, when they are supposed to be concentrating firmly on the road ahead.
I like the fact that Clarkson is looking down at the script all the time when he is inside the car xD
Older cars are excellent
Very in-depth review. Good on the old boy
I wish our UK friends got to try out a Magna.
I had a Sigma estate, needed an automatic car whilst recovering from a motorcycle accident, it was a fast car in sports mode.....but 12 mpg !
I had 2 of them, one manuell and one automatic 😎 i loved them 😁
Had the great pleasure of driving one many years ago. I loved it for what it was. I also owned a 1998 Galant v6 SW. Great, great car. But rust was a issue. Anyway. Mitsubishi is the most boring car company in the world now. What a shame.
I keep waiting for the biting sarcasm and it never comes.
i had the 2000 Mitsubishi diamante the American version. That was a relatively expensive mistake. Time was not kind to these cars
how detailed were these car reviews, and you got to see what you were buying, today all everyone is interested is CO2 emissions and all because of regulations...also difference in Top Gear, useful features in the car then to useful features to do with the car(blow it up) :D not that i disprove
SERDAROTmkd there can be lots of shilling these days so u gotta do more research
In Australia, this car was known as 'Magna' and they where trashy variants, only the Verada was luxurious.
Camry was still a better quality competitor.
Different various aimed at different buyers. Fleet = GLX. Everyday consumer, Executive, want a smidge more luxury? = SE. Or full verada. Remember over here they were designed to complete with Falcon/Fairmont and Commodore/Calaise, Overseas they were designed to compete with BMW and Mercedes
@@dodgeviper89 Also the Elite on the TR series, similar to Verada Xi but with the Astron II engine.
Jezza in a collar and tie. You can tell he's on a serious earner but hasn't yet been fully paid. Rather than the regular pocket moeny he got from the beeb or bonus from amazon and then allowed to say whatever he likes. Almost.
i hope they never hire this guy to do car commercials when his top gear contract ends. i fucking want one now and i dont even have a licence.
I miss my old starion...
Its funny listening to him list the "luxury features" which are now all basic equipment
It should become James bond car with loads of technology
Clarkson might have been youthful then, but he's completely youthless now.
Funny hey, you can totally tell he's reading off cue cards! It's funny though because in a later review he does for Topgear in 1991 he does bag it out quite a bit.....
It was called a Magna in Australia, poor sales in Australia led to Mitsubishi closing down Australian based production. (Is that really Jeremy Clarkson)
You had the never generation also. And awd versions.
We never had it!
I'd rather have the Starion they used on the slippy uphill start for an example, may have less gadgets and features but so much more nicer to look at in my opinion.
Weird contrast to his Top Gear review of the Sigma.
It's a verada it was built in Australia
Incorrect, NOT the sigma featured.
@@dodgeviper89 yes it is.
I owned one and live in the state of South Australia where they were made
in fact I've owned several Magnas/Verada's
@@thebogan-one2657 too right man. I worked at mmal for 20 years and I built the bloody things
@@chisel83 thankyou sir
This looks like a special job he did for Mitsubishi UK, certainly not Top Gear, I wonder how much they paid him?
That’s the Australian built model as the Japanese model had no A frames
The 4 door 7 window models were also built overseas. All Wagons were built in AU, but not all sedans.
Is this a Mitsubishi commercial?
How did he go from suit and Queens English, to POOOOOWER! and SPEEEEEED!
Love my mitsubishi's!
Seems like the ideal car! ;)
STARION sighted at 17:18 WOOT
He sounds like James May
I agree with you. I hate the current style of cars today. Too agressive. It's over the top, just a few brands have tasteful design.
Look at him! He is talking some serious facts!
Fun fact you can fit 2002 4 port fuel injectors into a 1993 Mitsubishi diamante
For what gain though? Wrong injector.
Everyone has there own tastes I know, but in my opinion there are very few modern cars that look really good, Compare the Ferrari 430 with the 288GTO or 308 from the 1980's. Modern cars are too restricted my safety regulations; they all have to be of a certain height, have crumple zones and wing mirrors that don't harm pedestrians if you run them over. I like some modern cars but very few compared with those from the 70's 80's and early 90's.
That hair!