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Parts for your 1995 Mitsubishi Pajero-Heater hose

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1995 Mitsubishi Pajero Heater Hose — purpose, fitment and servicing tips

Based on technical references including the Mitsubishi Pajero/Montero Factory Service Manual (1991–1999), Mitsubishi ASA parts cataloguing for the 1995 model year, and aftermarket application guides from Mackay and Gates, the 1995 Mitsubishi Pajero is fitted with heater hoses. Every common engine option of the era — 4D56 2.5TD, 4M40 2.8TD, 6G72 3.0 V6 and 6G74 3.5 V6 — uses a coolant-fed heater core with dedicated inlet and outlet hoses routed from the engine to the firewall. So yes, a heater hose is relevant on this vehicle.

On a 1995 Pajero, the heater hoses carry hot engine coolant to and from the heater core inside the dash. That flow is what gives cabin heat and also helps stabilise engine temperature under varying loads — handy on long Kiwi and Aussie trips or slow going on the tracks. Because they’re rubber and live near hot engines and turbochargers, they cop a tough life. Age, heat cycles, oil contamination and stray electrical currents can all degrade the hose from the inside out.

When servicing, it’s smart to inspect the full length of both heater hoses, including under the intake plenum and at the firewall stubs. Feel for soft spots, swelling near the clamps, surface cracking, or a crusty “wet” look that hints at weeping. Replace hoses that are more than 10 years old, unknown-age, or showing any of those tell-tales. On these Pajeros, it’s also worth refreshing the spring or worm-drive clamps — weak clamps cause leaks once the hose relaxes.

Replacement is straightforward: drain coolant to below heater-core level, remove old clamps, twist the hose to break the seal, and fit new quality coolant-rated hose (EPDM), trimming to gentle curves without kinks. Refill with the correct glycol mix specified for your engine, bleed air with the heater set to hot, and check for leaks after a good warm-up. A pressure test (cap off, tester on) is a tidy way to confirm the job. If the vehicle sees beach work or towing, consider preventative replacement during a major service — it’s cheap insurance against a cooked engine.

  • Tell-tale signs: sweet smell in cabin, misted windscreen, low coolant, damp carpet, swollen hose ends, or pink/white crust at clamps.
  • Service tip: replace hoses in pairs and log the date/kilometres