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Parts for your 2001 Mitsubishi Pajero-Heater hose

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2001 Mitsubishi Pajero heater hose — what it does and how to look after it

Heater hose is absolutely relevant to the 2001 Mitsubishi Pajero. Technical references including the Mitsubishi Pajero NM/NP workshop manual (Cooling/Heater section), Mitsubishi ASA/CAPS parts catalogue, and aftermarket listings from Gates and Dayco all show dedicated heater inlet and outlet hoses running coolant between the engine and the heater core (with additional rear-heater plumbing on some seven-seat trims). So if it’s a 2001 Pajero—whether 3.5L V6 petrol (6G74) or 3.2L diesel (4M41)—it’s fitted with heater hoses.

The heater hose’s job is straightforward: carry hot engine coolant to the heater core so there’s warm air for demisting and cabin comfort. It also helps stabilise engine temps by circulating coolant through the HVAC unit. When these hoses age, crack, go soft, or weep at the clamps, they can cause coolant loss, overheating, fogged windows, and that familiar sweet coolant smell under the bonnet or in the cabin.

As part of regular servicing, the Pajero’s heater hoses are worth a yearly look (or every 20,000 km). Squeeze-test for soft spots, check for swelling at the clamp lands, look for micro-cracks, oil contamination, or crusty white/green residue. Many tech sources suggest replacing coolant hoses around 7–10 years or 150,000–200,000 km, sooner if there’s any doubt—especially on vehicles that tow, tour, or see rough tracks.

  • Common red flags: coolant smell, damp carpet near the firewall, unexplained coolant loss, temperature swings, or visible seepage around clamps.

DIY-savvy owners can swap hoses, but patience is key:

  1. Work stone-cold. Relieve system pressure and drain coolant below heater-core level.
  2. Remove old spring or worm-drive clamps