Mitsubishi dropped a teaser this week for the new Montero—known internationally as the Pajero—and buried inside it was a callback that will hit differently for anyone who spent time behind the wheel of the original. The returning feature isn’t a locking differential, a ladder-frame chassis, or a beefy V6. It’s the gauge pod. Specifically, a dedicated auxiliary gauge cluster that nods directly to one of the Montero’s most distinctive interior signatures.
The new Montero is set to debut in Asia later this year, with a North American launch expected closer to 2030. That timeline makes this teaser more of a promise than a product, but the gauge reveal is deliberate, and it tells you something about how Mitsubishi wants enthusiasts to read this revival.
From the late 1980s through the early 2000s, the Montero’s auxiliary gauges weren’t just functional—they were a statement. Mounted prominently on the dashboard or overhead console depending on the generation, those extra readouts (typically covering inclinometer tilt angles, compass heading, and outside temperature) told you exactly what kind of truck this was before you ever turned a wheel off-road. They were the visual shorthand for serious intent.
Off-road culture embraced them accordingly. The Montero built a reputation in overlanding and trail communities not just for its Super Select 4WD system and long-travel suspension but also for the way it equipped its driver with situational awareness. Knowing your lateral tilt angle on a side-hill traverse isn’t a gimmick—it’s the kind of information that keeps a truck on four wheels. The gauge pod was the Montero telling you it took that seriously.
The modern twist is predictable but not necessarily a letdown: the new Montero‘s gauge pod goes digital. Rather than analog needles and physical inclinometer bubbles, the reborn version uses a dedicated off-road display screen—a purpose-built screen separate from the main infotainment system, positioned to give the driver real-time terrain data without hunting through menus.
That distinction matters. A lot of modern off-roaders bury their pitch-and-roll readouts inside a touchscreen that also handles navigation, climate, and media. Mitsubishi is apparently keeping the off-road data on its own dedicated surface, which preserves the original concept even if the execution is thoroughly contemporary. The spirit—giving the driver a clear, always-on view of what the terrain is doing—appears intact.
Here’s where Montero loyalists will reasonably split. Analog gauges had a tactile honesty to them—no boot time, no software glitches, no screen glare washing out in direct sun. The inclinometer bubble in a second-gen Montero worked the same at 20 below as it did in the desert. Digital systems are more capable on paper, but they carry the baggage of every infotainment system that’s ever frozen mid-trail.
That said, a dedicated off-road screen rather than a submenu is a meaningful concession to the original’s philosophy. Mitsubishi could have simply folded everything into a large central touchscreen and called it modern. The choice to tease a separate display suggests the engineering team understands what made the original layout work—and why burying it would have been the wrong call for a truck positioning itself as a Land Cruiser rival.
The new Montero has a long road to re-earning its reputation in North America, where the nameplate has been absent for over two decades. Getting the gauge pod right—even in updated form—is a small but symbolically loaded step in the right direction.
The full debut is still months away, and North American buyers won’t see the new Montero on dealer lots until closer to 2030. But for a community that’s waited a long time for Mitsubishi to take the Montero seriously again, a dedicated off-road display is at least a signal worth watching.
Sources: Car & Driver, Carbuzz, Carscoops, Motor1
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