Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

Brands

Show More Show Less

Price

Parts for your 1998 Mitsubishi Lancer-Exhaust gasket

Sort by

Explore 4WD & Adventure

Showing 40 - 78 of 322 products

1998 Mitsubishi Lancer exhaust gasket — what it does and when to replace it

Technical sources confirm the 1998 Mitsubishi Lancer does use exhaust gaskets. The Mitsubishi Motors Workshop Manual for CE/CK Lancer (Group 15 – Exhaust System), the Mitsubishi ASA electronic parts catalogue for 1998 Lancer models, and common service manuals such as Gregory’s/Haynes list multiple gaskets: a manifold-to-cylinder head gasket, a donut/ring gasket at the front pipe, and flat flange gaskets between the catalytic converter and the rest of the system. So yes, an exhaust gasket is absolutely relevant and fitted on a 1998 Lancer.

On a ’98 Lancer, exhaust gaskets keep the exhaust stream sealed from the engine’s ports right through to the mid-pipe flanges. They’re usually multi-layer steel (MLS) at the manifold-to-head, graphite/steel sandwich at flat flanges, and a crushable “donut” ring where the front pipe meets the manifold or catalytic converter. Their job is simple but critical: prevent leaks that cause tinny ticking noises, fumes in the cabin, loss of low-end torque, oxygen-sensor skewing, and WOF/RWC issues due to noise or emissions.

As part of routine servicing, it’s smart to give the Lancer’s exhaust joints a once-over. Look for black soot marks around flanges, a sharp ticking on cold start, or a sulphur/ exhaust smell near the firewall or under the car. If any joint has been apart, plan on new gaskets rather than reusing the old ones—once compressed and heat-cycled, they rarely reseal properly. When replacing:

  • Use quality, application-correct gaskets (MLS for the manifold, the correct size donut ring, and the right flange profile).
  • Clean mating faces so they’re flat and free of old gasket material or rust scale.
  • Avoid generic sealants