2.1
hardly worth mentioning- Crashes / Fires:
- 0 / 0
- Injuries / Deaths:
- 0 / 0
- Average Mileage:
- 73,340 miles
About These NHTSA Complaints:
The NHTSA is the US gov't agency tasked with vehicle safety. Complaints can be spread across multiple & redundant categories, & are not organized by problem. See the Back button — blue bar at the very top of the page — to explore more.
The issue began in 2004 when my vehicle was 1 year old. The temperature control knob became frozen and you could not turn it from heat to air conditioning or the other way. I spent $23,000 on this car and you could not turn from air conditioning to heat at will only a mechanic can manually turn it underneath the vehicle and then only put it on hot or cold. One time I was driving 600 miles for an emergency with the knob stuck on air conditioning and I was not able to turn it to heat. It was below freezing temperatures and the window fogged up because I was not able to put the defroster on. I had to continually pull over to wipe off the window and the frost. There could have been an accident if I had not continually pulled over. 2002 to 2007 lancers and Outlanders have this problem. It was a design flaw by the manufacturer but they will not own up to this dangerous problem. I have had it to a mechanic many times but they cannot fix it. I do not understand why Mitsubishi is not forced to fix this for consumers when this is clearly a dangerous problem if you cannot use the defroster. I should not be made to pay for something when it is a manufacturing flaw. There are 1000S of vehicles on the road with this problem and Mitsubishi will not own up that this is a clearly safety issue. The consumer has no power in this situation I have called customer service and am told they will do nothing about it unless it's recalled. Thank you for your help in this matter I have no place else to get help with this and I can't afford another vehicle. This is wrong Mitsubishi allows cars on the road with this problem and turns a blind eye to potentially dangerous situations. Thank you for your assistance.
- Amarillo, TX, USA
I am referring to a well known "sticky HVAC mix door" issue in the Mitsubishi Outlander and lancer vehicles in model year 2003 (perhaps among other years and models). This issue can result in an inability to defrost the windshield during cold weather driving. I have had the "sticky" issue for some time, which, while it was difficult to turn the knob, was not a huge issue. However, recently while driving, the door went from "sticky" to "stuck, " on the "cold" setting. My windows gradually started to fog and I was unable to defog them since the system could not blow hot air due to the stuck mix door. I was driving on an interstate highway (I-39) in central Wisconsin at the time, on August 27, 2016 in the evening. In late summer / early autumn, there is a wide temperature swing during the day and night, so flipping from hot to cold settings is very common. Fortunately it was not extremely cold so I was able to turn off the HVAC and open all my windows in order to get by during my short drive. However, in the winter, I need to have it set on "hot" at all times: Therefore, for winter driving, my car will not be drivable at all due to this issue. Please issue a recall in cold weather states asap. This is a very well known issue with these vehicles, but only at this time did it become a serious cause of concern: When the HVAC mix door is stuck on the cold setting, the inability to defog the windshield is a serious safety issue for the driver as well as for anyone else sharing the road.
- Kronenwetter, WI, USA
HVAC knob has always been hard to turn from heat to cool, but it has now completely broken. If you turn it to heat it bounces back to cool. I have no heater or defrost! I was quoted $1,500 to fix the problem because the HVAC cable and door are stuck shut. The dealer knew my exact problem and the part number off the top off his head! he said it is a very common problem, but they don't recall it because it isn't a safety hazard. I don't see how this is so. We were plummeted with snow and freezing temperatures this week and I had to use an ice scrapper on the inside of my windows while stopped at lights! freezing and no viability seems like a safety concern to me.
- Aurora, CO, USA
I purchased my 2003 Mitsubishi Outlander in February, 2013 with 104,000 miles on it. At first everything seemed fine, but after 2 weeks the back end of the car on the passenger side squeaks and makes lots of noise. At first it would only do it a little but it got worse and worse within a couple weeks it constantly makes noise, which is very annoying. I think the dealership must have done a quick cheap fix on it so when I test drove it, it would not do it until it was purchased. I also have water seeping in in the floor next to the door on the driver side and water coming through the dash area on the passenger side when it rains or in a car wash. I read online that that can cause electrical problems which worry's me. My head lights also have cracks and fogged up and makes it hard to see at night, which I've seen to be a common problem with this car. I don't understand why this car was never recalled for all the problems it has, this is ridiculous!
- Gastonia, NC, USA
- Amarillo, TX, USA