Originally Posted By: Quest
@Spetz,
I've been asking that very same questions for over 25 yrs now (starting with those mid-80s Mitsu turbo 1.5L engines on a hatchback to 3L V6 engines commonly used in caravans, etc. RE: why Mitsu (rebranded as Dodge colt) gasoline engines all suffer from some kind of premature valve stem seal failure, and to this day: I'm still not able to find a plausable answer to that.
That was a TOTALLY different problem, and all you have to do is find the technical service bulletins from the 1990s to see what the issue was. I had some friends who worked at dealership service departments and watched the whole process unfold as Chrysler and Mitsubishi went back and forth about how to try to solve the problem. In those engines (3.0), it was NOT the valve stem seals that were failing- it was the pressed-in valve GUIDES themselves that would begin to move up-and-down in the aluminum cylinder head along with the valve. They're not supposed to do that, they're supposed to stay pressed into the head! On some engine designs that would be a catastrophic failure, but the guides in the 3.0 were long enough that they wouldn't actually drop out of the head and hang the valve open. After riding up and down with the valve for a while, the guide would get pretty loose in the head and oil would leak between the guide and the head. When the stem seal fails on most engines, oil passes between the guide and the VALVE, not between the guide and the head. There were multiple TSB's from Mitsubishi to try and band-aid that piece-of-junk head design, including putting snap-rings around the top of the valve guides to prevent them moving in the heads. The 3.0 also had issues with poor ring pack design so they burned oil THAT way, also. On the plus side (well, its a plus if you were stuck owning one...) the bottom-end and timing belt on that engine would last nearly forever while the top end came apart and the tailpipe spewed blue smoke. Ultimately, the fix was for all the dang things to wear out and go to the junkyard.
I have NO idea why Mitsubishi has persistently had such a big problem with oil consumption, but to this DAY if I see a blue cloud ahead of me in traffic, chances are about 80% that its a Mitsubishi product. Most of the Mitsu-powered Chrysler products from the 80s and 90s are long dead, so these days its typically an Outlander, Endeavor, Montero, or Lancer.