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Parts for your 2009 Mitsubishi Lancer-Oil seals
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2009 Mitsubishi Lancer oil seals — what they do and when to replace them
Oil seals are absolutely relevant to the 2009 Mitsubishi Lancer. Factory technical sources such as the Mitsubishi Motors Lancer CY/CZ Service Manual (2008–2010 editions, Engine and Transaxle sections) and the Mitsubishi ASA electronic parts catalogue list multiple oil seals on this model, including front and rear crankshaft seals, camshaft seal, and transaxle/differential output shaft seals for both manual and CVT variants. General repair guides like the Haynes Lancer manual for 2007–2017 corroborate these components and their service procedures. So yes, the 2009 Lancer runs several oil seals critical to keeping engine oil and transmission fluid where they belong.
On a 2009 Lancer, oil seals do the quiet, messy work of holding fluid in and dirt out. The crankshaft and camshaft seals keep engine oil from escaping past spinning shafts, while the transaxle output seals hold manual gearbox oil or CVT fluid inside the case around the driveshafts. When these seals start to harden or wear, they can mist, weep, or drip—leading to low fluid levels, oily belts, or even clutch or CVT issues if ignored.
They’re not a scheduled replacement item, but they’re worth a look at every service. A quick inspection under the bonnet and undertray can catch early signs:
- Oily residue at the front timing cover or crank pulley
- Oil around the bellhousing area (rear main seal)
- Wetness where the driveshafts enter the transaxle
- Burning-oil smell after a drive or fresh spots on the driveway
Replacement timing is usually “as needed”. Smart times to do them are during related jobs: front crank seal when the crank pulley is off