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Parts for your 1995 Mitsubishi Pajero-Water pump
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1995 Mitsubishi Pajero water pump — what it does and when to replace it
Yes, the 1995 Mitsubishi Pajero uses a conventional mechanical water pump across its engine range. This is confirmed by technical sources including the Mitsubishi factory workshop manual (Cooling System section for 4D56, 4M40 and 6G72 engines), aftermarket repair manuals for Pajero/Montero/Shogun covering 1983–1997, and major parts catalogues from OEM suppliers that list specific water pumps and gasket sets for 1995 Pajero variants. Those sources describe a belt- or chain-driven pump circulating coolant through the block, heads and radiator.
The water pump’s whole job is to keep coolant moving so the engine stays in its happy temperature zone, whether crawling a beach track or cruising the Hume. On the 3.0L V6 (6G72), the pump sits behind the timing covers and is driven by the timing belt, on popular diesel trims like the 2.8L (4M40), it’s driven by the accessory belts and also carries the viscous fan. Either way, if the pump can’t flow properly, temperatures climb, head gaskets get unhappy, and reliability goes out the window.
For servicing, owners typically pair pump replacement with related jobs to save labour and reduce repeat work. On V6 models, it’s standard practice to replace the water pump whenever the timing belt is due (around the manufacturer’s interval for age/kilometres), along with the tensioner, idlers and cam/crank seals. On the 2.8 diesel, the pump is usually replaced on condition—look for leaks, rough bearings or weep hole staining—often alongside new drive belts and a fresh viscous fan if it’s getting lazy.
Good habits keep it sweet: stick with the correct coolant type and mix, renew coolant at the recommended interval, and bleed the system properly to avoid air locks after any cooling work. A new pump should always get a new gasket/O-ring, clean mating surfaces, correct torque on fasteners, and a check that the pulley and belts run true. After fitting, let it warm up with the heater on, top up the radiator and overflow bottle, and recheck for seepage over the next few drives.
- Typical warning signs: coolant drips under the front, pink/green crust on the housing, bearing noise, overheating at idle, or a wobbly pulley/fan hub.
- Helpful add-ons: fresh thermostat, radiator cap, and hoses if they’re ageing or swollen.
Technical sources referenced: Mitsubishi Pajero/Montero factory workshop manuals (Cooling System sections for 4D56, 4M40, 6G72), widely used aftermarket repair manuals for 1983–1997 Pajero/Montero, OEM supplier catalogues (e.g., Gates and Aisin) listing water pumps and timing kits for 1995 Pajero engines.
Popular questions
How often should a 1995 Pajero water pump be replaced?
On the 3.0L V6, it’s best changed with every timing belt service so the whole front-end is refreshed at once. On the 2.8 diesel, replace it when there’s leakage, bearing play or noise, or during major cooling system work. Many owners also choose preventative replacement beyond high kilometre marks if heading remote.
What are the classic signs the water pump is failing?
Coolant weeping from the pump housing or weep hole, a grinding or growling bearing, overheating at idle or in traffic, and a fan/pulley that wobbles are all red flags. Any of these warrant prompt inspection to avoid overheating and head gasket drama.
Do the V6 models need a timing belt with the pump?
Yes—on the 6G72 V6 the pump sits behind the timing covers and is driven by the belt. Replacing the pump together with the timing belt, tensioner and idlers is smart maintenance that prevents double labour and reduces the chance of a new-belt/old-pump failure.