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- spareparts
- Lancer Ralliart
- Posts: 662
- Joined: Wed Apr 08, 2009 5:36 pm
- Location: Mt Druitt, NSW, Australia
welcome to the club..... i had that issue with mine i wanted the roof and there was a 3 month wait end up getin it with out koz the daler offered the Hollandia sunroof to me as well but the thought of cutin a big hole into a car with 30ks on it sorta threw me a lil. but each to there own
the voices may not be real, but they have some pretty good ideas :D
..... If streets could talk they would Beg For Mercy!!! 151.6kw & 330nm @ all 4 paws .....
..... If streets could talk they would Beg For Mercy!!! 151.6kw & 330nm @ all 4 paws .....
- Aspired
- Lancer Ralliart
- Posts: 682
- Joined: Tue Jun 23, 2009 11:11 pm
- Location: Melbourne, VIC, Australia
Thats how Mitsubishi do it, they cut a hole in the roof.spareparts wrote:welcome to the club..... i had that issue with mine i wanted the roof and there was a 3 month wait end up getin it with out koz the daler offered the Hollandia sunroof to me as well but the thought of cutin a big hole into a car with 30ks on it sorta threw me a lil. but each to there own
Does anyone know what brand sunroof Mitsubishi use ?
Is it a Hollandia ?
The Mitsubishi one is fitted at the factory. The actual roof structure is different between sunroof models and regular ones.
So anything other than a proper factory fit one is not going to be 100%. They can put in the "reinforcing" all they like, but its no where near the same as a factory fit one.
Put it this way, I wouldn't risk it. Who knows how the car would crumble in a side impact. The roof makes up a lot of strength of the vehicle in side-impacts btw.
So anything other than a proper factory fit one is not going to be 100%. They can put in the "reinforcing" all they like, but its no where near the same as a factory fit one.
Put it this way, I wouldn't risk it. Who knows how the car would crumble in a side impact. The roof makes up a lot of strength of the vehicle in side-impacts btw.
Ok, here is the proof. These pictures were taken straight out of the Workshop manual.
Note item number 9. That replaces item 7, and it also provides the strength around all 4 sides of the sunroof, which a aftermarket sunroof could not do. And it would also replace the strength lost by having a gaping hole in the roof outer sheeting.
Note item number 9. That replaces item 7, and it also provides the strength around all 4 sides of the sunroof, which a aftermarket sunroof could not do. And it would also replace the strength lost by having a gaping hole in the roof outer sheeting.
- Aspired
- Lancer Ralliart
- Posts: 682
- Joined: Tue Jun 23, 2009 11:11 pm
- Location: Melbourne, VIC, Australia
Number 9 is just the sunroof housing that all sunroofs have.
A company can't just cut a hole in the roof and fit a sunroof, it would have be be engineered to pass all safety standards/requirements of the manufacturer. Have a look at the safety section here - http://www.prestigesunroofs.com.au/ Click on Sunroofs then Sunroofs and Safety
A company can't just cut a hole in the roof and fit a sunroof, it would have be be engineered to pass all safety standards/requirements of the manufacturer. Have a look at the safety section here - http://www.prestigesunroofs.com.au/ Click on Sunroofs then Sunroofs and Safety
Yes I'm sure it passes all standards. But my point it, it's not going to be as structural as the genuine.
And number 9 is the housing, yes, but it incorporates number 7 effectively. When an aftermarket sunroof is fitted, number 7 would have to be cut out, and there is no way it can be replaced. That's the point I was trying to get across
And number 9 is the housing, yes, but it incorporates number 7 effectively. When an aftermarket sunroof is fitted, number 7 would have to be cut out, and there is no way it can be replaced. That's the point I was trying to get across
- Aspired
- Lancer Ralliart
- Posts: 682
- Joined: Tue Jun 23, 2009 11:11 pm
- Location: Melbourne, VIC, Australia
It does get replaced..
Look at this - http://www.prestigesunroofs.com.au/pdfs ... nroofs.pdf
Look at this - http://www.prestigesunroofs.com.au/pdfs ... nroofs.pdf
- Aspired
- Lancer Ralliart
- Posts: 682
- Joined: Tue Jun 23, 2009 11:11 pm
- Location: Melbourne, VIC, Australia
This is not done on the production line as part of the manufacturing process of the shell. Mitsubishi will not have 2 separate production lines for every model producing 2 different shells. All shells are the same when built by Mitsubishi. Sunroofs are fitted later and it is at this stage that the changes to the roof are made.SIR-VRX wrote:Aspired wrote:SIR-VRX wrote:The actual roof structure is different between sunroof models and regular ones
Are you sure about this. The production cost for this would be huge.
1000000% sure. I will get pics to prove it right now for you.
That is how Ford do it and I can't see Mitsubishi or any other manufacturer of a high volume car doing it any differently. Ford used Tickford to fit the factory optioned sunroofs(which were Hollandia sunroofs), But since FPV i think they now use prestige sunroofs, I don't think FPV do it. Its just not economically viable to produce 2 different shells of each model.
It is on the production line. They produce the Evo chassis on the same line. And there is greater differences between the Evo and the Lancer so a sunroof equipped Lancer which is only 3 pieces different.
The Japanese have mass production mastered in every degree. Ford Australia is so behind it is not funny. They can't even get panel gaps even.
The Japanese have mass production mastered in every degree. Ford Australia is so behind it is not funny. They can't even get panel gaps even.
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