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Parts for your 1988 Mitsubishi Pajero-Batteries
Narva MDL38 Stop/Tail/Indicator Red-Amber Lens LED 10 to 30V - 2 Pce - 93812BL2
Narva 9-33 Volt LED Rear Stop/Tail and direcion indicator and reverse lamp with in built retro reflector and 0.5m hard wired cable - 97310
Narva Model 70 Rear Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable, Bulk Pack Of 4 - 97010-1/4
Narva 9-33 Volt LED Rear Stop/Tail, Left Hand Squential direcion indicator and reverse lamps with in built retro reflector and 0.5m hard wired cable - 97312L
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Narva Model 18 LED Side Marker/Cabin Marker/FEOM Light Amber 10-30V - 91800
Narva 9-33 Volt Surface Mount LED Side marker lamp(red/amber) with Chrome cover and 0.5m cable - 96802
Narva Model 70 Rear Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable And Dt Plug - 97010-1-D
Narva 9-33 Volt Surface Mount LED Side directional indicator(amber) with Black cover and 0.5m cable - 96842B
9-33 Volt LED Reverse, Rear Direction Indicator and Stop Lamps with LED Tail Rings - 94365C
1988 Mitsubishi Pajero batteries
Based on technical sources such as the Mitsubishi Pajero/Montero factory service manual (1982–1991), the Electrical Wiring Manual for the same era, and Australian/NZ battery catalogues from brands like Century Yuasa, the 1988 Mitsubishi Pajero definitely uses a 12‑volt automotive battery for starting and vehicle electrics. Many petrol models run a single 12 V battery, while some diesel or cold‑climate variants may have dual-battery setups or higher cold‑cranking requirements. So yes—batteries are relevant to this model.
On a 1988 Pajero, the battery’s job is to crank the starter, feed power to glow plugs on diesels, and keep essentials like lights, wipers, and the radio alive with the engine off. Once the engine’s running, the alternator does the heavy lifting, but the battery still evens out voltage and supports sudden loads. Pick a battery with the right case size, terminal orientation, and cold cranking amps (CCA) for the engine—diesels usually need more CCA. If the vehicle has a dual setup or a lot of touring gear, an auxiliary battery with a proper isolator is a smart move.
Replacement and maintenance are straightforward and well worth doing as part of regular servicing in Australia and New Zealand, where heat, vibration, dust, and corrugations can shorten battery life. Most owners can expect 3–5 years from a quality unit with correct charging. Always recycle the old one properly.
- Check charge voltage at the terminals with the engine running: typically around 13.8–14.4 V.
- Keep terminals clean and tight