Mitsubishi vehicles and equipment often share familiar nameplates across multiple generations, markets, and configurations. This brand page is designed to help you pick a manual that fits the specific Mitsubishi you have—so the platform notes, diagrams, and reference sections align with the same model window and revision.
Most shoppers get the cleanest fit by aligning three things from the listing title: the Mitsubishi model line, the covered years, and any series/engine wording that narrows the scope. When a title bundles several related models, that bundle is typically the intended coverage boundary rather than a generic “fits all” label.
Mitsubishi listings commonly include short cues that act like a scope label: phrases such as service manual or workshop manual, engine-series naming (4G/6G families and similar), and compact manual identifiers that look like publication numbers. Those cues are especially helpful on Mitsubishi because the same vehicle name can appear with different engines, trims, or market versions inside the same era.
This page can include a mix of document styles. Some files are written around a vehicle platform and its year band (useful when your starting point is the model line). Others are engine-family references that apply across multiple applications, and some listings lean toward parts/diagram-style content where the source includes assembly mapping. Reading the label as “what this file is organized around” makes comparisons much clearer when two titles look similar.
This Mitsubishi section includes vehicle coverage for lines like Pajero/Montero, Triton/L200, Eclipse, Chariot/Space Runner/Space Wagon, and L300 Delica; equipment coverage such as MT-series tractors and forklift truck manuals; plus engine and component-focused publications like SL- and L-series diesel engines, 4G5/6G7 engine-series manuals, and TD-series turbocharger documentation.
When you’re torn between close options, the listings that repeat your exact model wording and keep the year window tighter usually read more “on target” for the generation you’re working with.