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Parts for your 1998 Mitsubishi Pajero-Brake pads
1998 Mitsubishi Pajero Brake Pads — What They Do and When to Replace Them
Brake pads are absolutely relevant to the 1998 Mitsubishi Pajero. Factory documentation confirms it: the Mitsubishi Pajero (V20 series, 1991–1999) Workshop Manual, Group 35A – Brakes, specifies ventilated front disc brakes with pads on all variants, while the rear axle is model-dependent (some trims run rear discs with pads, others use drum brakes with shoes). The Haynes/Mitsubishi Montero–Pajero 1992–1999 repair manual echoes the same setup. So, regardless of rear configuration, every 1998 Pajero uses front brake pads and they’re a routine service item.
On a 1998 Pajero, the brake pads clamp the rotors to turn pedal pressure into stopping force. Good pads give consistent feel, shorter stopping distances, and quieter operation. They’re the frontline of braking performance whether it’s daily commuting, towing the boat, or bouncing along a corrugated gravel road.
As part of regular servicing, pads should be inspected for thickness, even wear, glazing and contamination. Many workshops in Australia and New Zealand check pad thickness at each service and recommend replacement once friction material approaches the manufacturer’s minimum (often around 3 mm remaining). It’s also smart to check rotor condition, caliper slide-pin movement, and brake fluid age while you’re there.
- Hear a squeal or chirp that changes with braking? Could be wear indicators telling it’s time.
- Longer stopping distances, a soft pedal, or pulling to one side point to uneven pad wear or sticky slide pins.
- Vibration under braking can indicate rotor issues that will chew through fresh pads if left unattended.
When replacing pads, fit quality parts that suit how the Pajero is used. Semi‑metallic compounds handle heat and towing well