Your Selected Vehicle
Parts for your 1998 Mitsubishi Pajero-Batteries
Narva MDL34 Stop/Tail/Indicator Light With Licence Plate Lamp LED 12V - 2 Pce - 93440BL2
Narva Model 70 Rear Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable
Explore 4WD & Adventure
Narva 9-33 Volt Surface Mount LED front end outline marker(white) with Chrome cover and 0.5m cable and Deutsch connector - 96812-D
Narva Model 70 Rear Stop/Tail /Indicator Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable, Bulk Pack Of 4 - 97000-1/4
Narva Model 70 Rear Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable - 97010-1
Narva 9-33 Volt Surface Mount LED rear end outline marker lamp(red) with Black cover and 0.5m cable - 96832B
Narva Model 63 Front End Outline Marker, Side Indicator (Amber) Or External Cabin Marker Lamp Black Base And 0.5M Cable
Narva Model 70 Rear Stop/Tail /Indicator Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable And Dt Plug - 97000-1-D
Narva MDL38 Stop/Tail/Indicator Red-Amber Lens LED 10 to 30V - 2 Pce - 93812BL2
1998 Mitsubishi Pajero batteries
Based on technical sources including the Mitsubishi Pajero 1997–1999 Service Manual (Electrical: Battery/Charging), the 1998 Owner’s Manual, and workshop handbooks like Haynes/Gregory’s for Pajero/Montero through 1999, the 1998 Mitsubishi Pajero is fitted with a 12‑volt negative‑earth battery as standard. Some diesel and cold‑climate variants may use a dual‑battery setup. So yes—batteries are absolutely relevant and used on this model.
On a ’98 Pajero, the battery’s job is to crank the engine, stabilise voltage for the ECU and ignition, and keep accessories alive when the alternator isn’t spinning. Once the engine’s running, the alternator charges the battery, typically holding system voltage around 13.8–14.5 V (as per the charging specs referenced in the service literature). A healthy battery means reliable cold starts, steady lights, and fewer electrical gremlins on bush tracks.
When it’s time for servicing, a quick battery health check is well worth it—especially if the unit is 3–5 years old or the truck does lots of short trips. A basic routine most techs follow:
- Visual check: look for swelling, leaks, cracked case, or loose/dirty clamps.
- Test: measure open‑circuit voltage (about 12.6 V fully charged), load‑test or conductance‑test for state of health, and confirm alternator output at idle and with load.
- Clean and secure: remove corrosion with a bicarbonate solution, rinse, dry, and apply a terminal protectant