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Parts for your 1988 Mitsubishi Pajero-Batteries

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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, remove negative first when disconnecting, reconnect negative last.
  • If it’s a serviceable flooded battery, top up with demineralised water to the indicated level.
  • Inspect the tray and clamp for rust, secure the battery so it can’t move on rough roads.
  • Load-test if cranking is slow, lights dip at idle, or there’s a sulphur smell or swollen case.
  • For diesels or dual setups, replace paired batteries together so they age evenly.
  • Use terminal protectant to reduce corrosion, and check the engine earth strap for good continuity.

If fitting accessories (fridge, lights, winch), consider an isolator and dedicated auxiliary battery so the starter battery stays ready to go under the bonnet.

Popular questions about 1988 Mitsubishi Pajero batteries

What battery type and size suits a 1988 Pajero?
Most 1988 Pajeros use a 12 V lead‑acid starting battery (maintenance‑free or serviceable flooded). Diesel variants typically need higher CCA than petrol. Case size and terminal layout can vary by engine and market, so measure the tray, check terminal orientation, and match the CCA and reserve capacity recommended in vehicle data or a reputable battery catalogue.

Does a 1988 Pajero have dual batteries from factory?
Many were single‑battery from factory, but some diesel or cold‑climate specifications were supplied with dual or dealer‑fitted systems. Touring owners often add an auxiliary battery with an isolator to run fridges and lights without draining the starter battery.

How long should a Pajero battery last?
In AU/NZ conditions, a good battery usually lasts 3–5 years. Signs it’s due include slow cranking, dim lights at idle, repeated jump‑starts, swollen case, or heavy corrosion at the posts. A quick voltage and load test during servicing will confirm its health.