Toyota HiAce H100 4WD
More commercial-tough; strong parts; similar 4WD van use
Buyer's guide
15 min read
Buyer's guide & specs
Background
The Mitsubishi Delica has run as a nameplate since 1968, spanning five generations from cab-over delivery van to the 4x4 vanlife platform North American buyers now compete for at auction. Most import buyers want the L300 (1986–1999, cab-over, 4D56 turbodiesel) or the L400 Space Gear (1994–2007, semi-bonneted, 4M40 turbodiesel, Pajero-shared Super Select 4WD). The D:5 fifth generation (2007–present) stays outside the US 25-year rule until 2032. Prices split on rust and 4WD condition; two examples with identical years and mileage can sit $15,000 apart on body work alone.
The fourth-generation L400 Space Gear (1994–2007) borrowed its 4×4 hardware from the second-generation Mitsubishi Pajero — the SUV that won Dakar repeatedly through the 1990s and early 2000s. Where the Toyota HiAce H100 4WD and Nissan Caravan E24 4WD ran simpler part-time systems, the L400 inherited Pajero-derived Super Select 4WD with 2H, 4H, 4HLc, and 4LLc modes selectable on the move up to about 100 km/h.
The 2.8L 4M40 turbodiesel is a direct Pajero carryover, and so are the PE8W and PD8W chassis codes that cover most 4WD Space Gear builds. Mitsubishi dropped the L300-era cargo truck and replaced it with short-wheelbase and long-wheelbase passenger bodies, six trim levels (XR, Exceed, Super Exceed, Chamonix, Jasper, Active World), and the Aero Roof high-roof option.
South Korea took the L400 platform and rebadged it as the Hyundai Starex, which ran in parallel from 1997 to 2007. Pajero parts crossover is the L400 owner's quiet advantage at the salvage yard.
Three factors drove the Delica into the overlanding mainstream. The US 25-year import rule opened the L300 in 2011 and the L400 in 2019, giving North American buyers legal access to a 4×4 van that Canada, the UK, and Australia had absorbed for years. The body itself — tall, eight-seat, with factory dual A/C, Crystal Lite Roof glass panels on higher trims, and an interior that folds flat — was a camper before any owner touched it.
The drivetrain answered what other JDM vans couldn't. The 4M40 turbodiesel made enough low-end torque to crawl in 4LLc, and the L300's cab-over geometry gave it approach and departure angles closer to a body-on-frame SUV than the longer-overhang HiAce. Common problems reported on early Delicas cluster around the cooling system and timing belt rather than the drivetrain itself.
A parts-import economy and r/Delica filled the gaps Mitsubishi's absent US dealer network left behind. Build threads there document the shift from curiosity to primary overland rig between roughly 2015 and today. The 4D56 turbodiesel in L300-spec vans and the 4M40 in the L400 are the two engines the community knows well enough to source parts for on short notice.
Editorial notes
Quick read
Constants
Chassis history
The Delica nameplate has run since 1968, but the three generations that matter to import buyers are the L300, the L400 Space Gear, and the D:5. The L300 is the boxy cab-over that built the cult. The L400 Space Gear is the one most people actually want, with the Pajero-shared 4WD and the 4M40 diesel. The D:5 is the modern unibody MPV and most of it isn't US legal yet.
Third generation — Star Wagon / L300 (1986–1999)
Delica D:5 — CV chassis (2007–present)
Buyer's call
The Delica is a van with the running gear of a 4x4 SUV. That's the whole pitch and it's also where every trade-off comes from. You get a tall eight-seat body that climbs hills, but you also get diesel maintenance, rust risk, and parts that don't sit on the shelf at your local store.
Reliability
The Delica is a tough truck under the body, but it's old and it lived a hard life in Japan before you got it. Most of the trouble traces to two places. The 4M40 and 4D56 diesels crack heads when they overheat, and rust eats the rails and sills if the van saw snow country. Get the cooling system pressure tested cold, look hard underneath, and you'll filter out 80 percent of the bad Delicas before you even drive one.
| Issue | Cause | Solution | Est. cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Frame/crossmember rust | Salt exposure, trapped mud, poor undercoat | Cut/replace sections; avoid plated-over rot | $1500-8000 |
| Rocker/sill perforation | Clogged drains, seam rust from inside out | Proper metal repair; cavity wax after | $1200-6000 |
| Strut tower rust/cracks | Corrosion at seams; prior impacts | Weld repair/reinforce; align after | $800-3500 |
| 4D56 overheating -> head crack | Weak cooling, old rad, fan clutch, air pockets | Pressure test; head job; upgrade cooling parts | $2500-6500 |
| Head gasket failure | Overheat, warped head, poor coolant maintenance | Machine head, gasket set, bolts; fix root cause | $1800-4500 |
| Radiator end tank cracks | Age, heat cycles, overpressure from overheat | Replace radiator/cap; flush and bleed properly | $350-900 |
| Fan clutch weak | Silicone fluid breakdown with age | Replace or refill; verify shroud intact | $250-650 |
| Thermostat sticking | Cheap parts, corrosion, wrong temp rating | OEM thermostat; bleed system carefully | $120-300 |
| Timing belt overdue | Unknown history; long intervals; oil contamination | Full kit: belt, tensioners, seals, water pump | $900-1800 |
| Balance shaft belt failure | Neglect; seized balance shaft; old tensioner | Replace belt/tensioner; inspect timing belt too | $700-1600 |
| Front crank seal leak | Age, crankcase pressure, worn seal surface | Replace seal; check breather and belt contamination | $400-900 |
| Injection pump front seal leak | Age/hardening; ULSD shrinkage on old seals | Reseal or rebuild pump; set timing after | $900-2200 |
| Air in fuel/hard start | Cracked fuel lines, loose clamps, filter head | Replace hoses/clamps; rebuild filter head; prime | $150-600 |
| Glow plug/relay faults | Aged plugs, relay contacts, wiring corrosion | Test circuit; replace plugs/relay; clean grounds | $200-700 |
| Turbo oil leak/smoke | Worn seals, high blow-by, clogged drain | Rebuild/replace turbo; fix crankcase venting | $900-2500 |
| Intercooler hose splits | Oil swelling, age cracks, clamp cuts | Replace hoses/clamps; check boost control | $150-500 |
| EGR/intake clogging | Soot + oil mist buildup over time | Clean intake/EGR; verify boost and AFR | $250-900 |
| Auto trans shift flare | Worn clutches, old ATF, valve body wear | Service ATF/filter; rebuild if slipping persists | $350-4500 |
| Delayed D/R engagement | Low ATF, worn seals, clogged filter | Correct fluid level; service; rebuild if needed | $250-4500 |
| Transfer case leaks | Aged seals, overfilled, vent blockage | Replace seals; clear vent; refill correct oil | $250-900 |
| 4WD lights flashing | Vacuum leaks, sticky actuator, bad switches | Smoke test vac lines; clean actuator; replace switches | $150-900 |
| Front diff actuator issues | Corrosion, vacuum solenoid failure, stuck fork | Rebuild/replace actuator; renew vacuum solenoids | $300-1200 |
| CV joint clicking/vibe | Torn boots, lifted suspension angles, wear | Replace axle/boots; correct lift geometry | $250-900 |
| Idler arm wear/wander | Heavy front end, age, poor lubrication | Replace idler and align; inspect center link | $250-700 |
| Ball joint failure risk | Age, torn boots, off-road impacts | Replace joints; inspect knuckles and arms | $300-1200 |
| Wheel bearing noise/play | Improper preload, water ingress, old grease | Clean/repack/adjust; replace bearings if pitted | $250-800 |
| Rear trailing arm bushes | Rubber degradation; heavy loads | Replace bushes; align; check rear links | $400-1200 |
| Brake hard line corrosion | Salt exposure; factory coating fails with age | Replace lines with NiCopp; flush system | $500-1800 |
| Caliper slider seizure | Dry pins, torn boots, rusted brackets | Rebuild/replace calipers; service sliders properly | $250-900 |
| Parking brake weak/seized | Cable corrosion, rear drum-in-hat rust | Replace cables/shoes; clean hardware | $250-800 |
| Heater core leak | Corrosion from old coolant; electrolysis | Replace core; flush; ensure proper coolant mix | $700-1600 |
| Rear A/C line leaks | Corroded long lines underbody | Replace/repair lines; evacuate and recharge | $600-1800 |
| A/C compressor failure | Age, low refrigerant oil, contamination | Replace compressor/drier; flush; recharge | $900-2200 |
| Alternator weak at idle | Worn brushes/regulator; high electrical load | Rebuild/replace alternator; clean grounds | $250-700 |
| Ground corrosion gremlins | Moisture, battery acid, old terminals | Clean/replace grounds; dielectric grease | $80-300 |
| Water leaks into cabin | Sunroof drains, window seals, seam rust | Clear drains; reseal; repair rust at seams | $150-2500 |
| Sliding door roller wear | Dry track, rust, heavy use | Replace rollers; clean/lube track; adjust door | $200-700 |
| Power window slow/fail | Worn regulators, dry channels, weak motors | Service channels; replace regulator/motor | $150-600 |
| Cluster/temp gauge inaccurate | Aged sender, poor grounds, cluster aging | Test sender; add real temp gauge for safety | $120-450 |
Market
The Mitsubishi Delica was never officially sold in the United States in any of its van or 4×4 forms. The closest US-market presence was the Mitsubishi Van (1987–1990), a federalized version of an earlier generation, which was a sales failure and withdrawn before the L300 4WD variant ever reached US dealers. Every L300, L400, and D:5 Delica on US roads today is a personal or commercial import, brought in under the 25-year Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards exemption: L300 examples from 1986 build became eligible in 2011, L400 Space Gear from 1994 build became eligible in 2019, and the D:5 fifth generation starts becoming eligible in 2032. Canada's 15-year rule has made the Delica a fixture there for over a decade longer than in the US, which is why Vancouver, Vancouver Island, and the BC interior remain the densest North American Delica markets and the primary source of cross-border resale stock. Buyers should verify the actual export build month (not the model-year designation) on the Japanese export certificate; cars built in late 1985 or late 1993 are not yet eligible even when the model year overlaps the threshold.
Mitsubishi Delica L300 4X4 Turbo Diesel — POV Drive Off Road
Specs
The two engines you care about are the 4D56 turbodiesel in the L300 and the 4M40 turbodiesel in the L400. Both are 2.5 to 2.8 liter four cylinders. Both make modest power and a lot of low end torque, which is what a tall heavy van needs. The L400 also offers the 6G72 V6 gasoline if you don't want a diesel, and the L300 has the 4G63 and 4G64 petrols. The transmission and 4WD system matter more than the engine on a Delica. Verify Super Select on the L400 and confirm the transfer case actually shifts through all four modes before you buy.
| Chassis | Engine | Displacement | Power | Boost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| L300 (Star Wagon/Van) | 4G63 | 2.0L | unknown (exact rpm varies by market/year) | N/A | Exact JDM ratings vary; data incomplete |
| L300 (Star Wagon/Van) | 4G64 | 2.4L | unknown (exact rpm varies by market/year) | N/A | Exact JDM ratings vary; data incomplete |
| L300 (Star Wagon/Van) | 4D56 | 2.5L | unknown (exact rpm varies by market/year) | N/A | Diesel NA; exact ratings vary by year |
| L300 (Star Wagon/Van) | 4D56T | 2.5L | unknown (exact rpm varies by market/year) | unknown | Turbo diesel; boost/rating varies by year |
| L400 (Space Gear) | 4G64 | 2.4L | unknown (exact rpm varies by market/year) | N/A | SOHC 16V; exact JDM ratings vary |
| L400 (Space Gear) | 6G72 | 3.0L | unknown (exact rpm varies by market/year) | N/A | V6; exact JDM ratings vary by year |
| L400 (Space Gear) | 4M40 | 2.8L | unknown (exact rpm varies by market/year) | unknown | Turbo diesel; intercooler varies by spec |
| D:5 (CV5W/CV1W) | 4B12 | 2.4L | unknown (exact rpm varies by market/year) | N/A | MIVEC; exact JDM ratings vary |
| D:5 (CV1W) | 4N14 | 2.3L | unknown (exact rpm varies by market/year) | unknown | DI-D turbo diesel; output varies by year |
| Type | Ratios | Availability | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5-speed Manual | unknown | L300/L400 (varies by trim/market) | Exact ratios vary by gearbox code |
| 4-speed Automatic | unknown | L300/L400 (varies by trim/market) | INVECS-era units; ratios vary |
| 5-speed Automatic | unknown | L400 (late), D:5 diesel (some years) | Exact model/ratios vary by year |
| CVT | unknown | D:5 2.4L petrol (most years) | INVECS-III CVT; step logic varies |
| 8-speed Automatic | unknown | D:5 2.3L diesel (post-2019) | Aisin 8AT class; exact ratios TBD |
Lineup
The L300 trims went Star Wagon GLX, Exceed, Super Exceed, and Chamonix on the passenger side, plus DX and GL on the commercial van side. The L400 Space Gear added XR, Jasper, and Active World, and offered short and long wheelbase bodies. The trim names tell you what features the van got, but they don't tell you the 4WD spec. A Super Exceed can be 2WD and an XR can be 4WD. Read the chassis code on the export certificate to confirm.
| Generation | Trim | Engine | Key features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Delica (L300) 3rd gen | Delica Star Wagon GLX | 4G63, 4D56 | 8-seat, dual A/C (opt), 2WD/4WD, steel wheels |
| Delica (L300) 3rd gen | Delica Star Wagon Exceed | 4G63, 4D56 | Crystal Lite roof (opt), velour, power windows |
| Delica (L300) 3rd gen | Delica Star Wagon Super Exceed | 4G63, 4D56T | Crystal Lite roof, captains chairs, 4WD, alloys |
| Delica (L300) 3rd gen | Delica Star Wagon Chamonix | 4D56T | Winter package, 4WD, special trim, fog lamps |
| Delica (L300) 3rd gen | Delica Van DX | 4G64, 4D56 | Commercial, vinyl, sliding door, 2WD/4WD |
| Delica (L300) 3rd gen | Delica Van GL | 4G64, 4D56 | Commercial, upgraded interior, 2WD/4WD |
| Delica (L400) 4th gen | Delica Space Gear XR | 4G64, 4M40 | 8-seat, dual A/C (opt), 2WD/4WD, ABS (opt) |
| Delica (L400) 4th gen | Delica Space Gear Exceed | 4G64, 4M40 | Crystal Lite roof (opt), power doors (opt), alloys |
| Delica (L400) 4th gen | Delica Space Gear Super Exceed | 6G72, 4M40 | High spec, captains chairs, Crystal Lite roof, 4WD |
| Delica (L400) 4th gen | Delica Space Gear Chamonix | 4M40 | Winter package, 4WD, special trim, fog lamps |
| Delica (L400) 4th gen | Delica Space Gear Jasper | 4M40 | Special edition, 4WD, unique trim, alloys |
| Delica (L400) 4th gen | Delica Space Gear Active World | 4M40 | Outdoor edition, roof rack (opt), 4WD, seat fabric |
| Delica (L400) 4th gen | Delica Space Gear Aero Roof | 4G64, 4M40, 6G72 | Aero roof, high roof, dual A/C, 2WD/4WD |
| Delica (L400) 4th gen | Delica Space Gear Long (LWB) | 4G64, 4M40, 6G72 | Long wheelbase, 8-seat, 4WD (opt), dual A/C |
| Delica (D:5) 5th gen | Delica D:5 M | 4B12, 4N14 | 8-seat, CVT/AT, FWD/4WD, dual power doors (opt) |
| Delica (D:5) 5th gen | Delica D:5 G | 4B12, 4N14 | Higher spec, alloys, power doors, multi-info display |
| Delica (D:5) 5th gen | Delica D:5 G Power Package | 4B12, 4N14 | Power doors, roof rails, upgraded audio, 4WD (opt) |
| Delica (D:5) 5th gen | Delica D:5 Roadest | 4B12 | Aero body, sport suspension (varies), 2WD/4WD |
| Delica (D:5) 5th gen | Delica D:5 Active Gear | 4B12, 4N14 | Outdoor styling, skid garnish, roof rails, 4WD (opt) |
| Delica (D:5) 5th gen | Delica D:5 Urban Gear | 4N14 | Blackout trim, refined styling, 4WD, safety suite |
| Delica (D:5) 5th gen | Delica D:5 P (post-2019) | 4N14 | Top spec, safety suite, power doors, premium interior |
| Delica (D:5) 5th gen | Delica D:5 G-Power Package (post-2019) | 4N14 | Mid-high spec, safety suite, power doors, 4WD |
Production
The L400 sold around 100,000 a year in Japan at peak, then tapered off through the late 1990s as the minivan segment moved on. The numbers below are JDM domestic sales, with export notes where Mitsubishi shipped the van to the Philippines, Taiwan, and China. Production for export continued well past the Japanese domestic peak, which is why you'll find clean late-build L400s coming out of Southeast Asia.
| Year | Domestic | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1995 | 109,930 | |
| 1996 | 88,978 | |
| 1997 | 69,495 | |
| 1998 | 34,614 | |
| 1999 | 17,758 | |
| 2000 | 28,242 | Philippines: 2,918; Taiwan: 8,125 |
| 2001 | 12,965 | Philippines: 2,079; Taiwan: 5,133; China: 690 |
| 2002 | 17,456 | Philippines: 2,925; Taiwan: 4,192; China: 600 |
| 2003 | 13,011 | Philippines: 3,529; Taiwan: 5,166; China: 13,710 |
| 2004 | 16,432 | Philippines: 2,826; Taiwan: 3,862; China: 16,074 |
| 2005 | 16,444 | Philippines: 3,685; Taiwan: 2,315; China: 5,960 |
| 2006 | 16,041 | Philippines: 3,992; Taiwan: 1,160; L400 → D:5 transition |
| 2007 | 14,824 | Philippines: 4,580; Taiwan: 1,115; D:5 fifth-generation launch |
Pricing
Delica prices have held up better than most JDM imports. A rough L300 starts around $9,000 and a clean documented L400 Super Exceed with low miles can clear $40,000. The price is mostly about rust and 4WD condition. Two Delicas with the same year and miles can sit $15,000 apart on body work alone. Don't shop on price. Shop on the underside of the van.
Today's market range: $9,000 to $45,000 (median ~$22,000). Source: JDMBUYSELL / USS Auction.
Delica prices remain firm: clean, rust-free L300/L400 command rising premiums, while average imports plateau due to reconditioning costs. Expect steady demand from overlanding; top comps are condition- and documentation-driven.
Inspect
Walk this list with the seller, not in front of them. The Critical items mean walking away if there's no paperwork. The High items can usually be priced into the deal. On a Delica, the underside inspection matters more than the engine bay. Bring a flashlight and a magnet and crawl under it.
Cross-shop
If the Delica doesn't end up being the right van, the closest options are the Toyota HiAce 4WD if you want the same shape with Toyota parts support, or the Nissan Caravan E24 4WD if you want simpler running gear. The Mitsubishi Pajero shares the 4WD hardware with the L400 if you'd rather have an SUV than a van. None of them have the Crystal Lite Roof or the captains chairs, but they all solve the same overland problem.
More commercial-tough; strong parts; similar 4WD van use
Cheaper entry; camper-friendly; similar size and mission
Workhorse 4WD van; often less hype-priced than Delica
Smaller, lighter; good city/camping compromise; lower costs
If you want Super Select + diesel without van complexity
Compare
Among JDM 4WD vans of the L300 and L400 era, the Delica wins on off road capability and loses on parts availability. The HiAce is easier to live with day to day. The Caravan is cheaper to buy. The Delica is the one you take camping. The table below compares them on the dimensions that actually matter to overland buyers, not the ones a magazine would pick.
| Feature | Mitsubishi Delica | Toyota HiAce 4WD H100 | Nissan Caravan E24 4WD |
|---|---|---|---|
| Layout/mission | 4WD van/MPV | 4WD cab-over van | 4WD cab-over van |
| 4WD system | L400 Super Select | Part-time 4WD | Part-time 4WD |
| Low range | Yes (L300/L400) | Varies by trim | Varies by trim |
| Engine (common) | 2.5 4D56 / 2.8 4M40 | 3.0 1KZ-TE diesel | 2.7 TD27 diesel |
| Power (typical) | 85-140 hp (varies) | 125-140 hp (varies) | 100-130 hp (varies) |
| Highway comfort | L400 strong; L300 fair | Good; more commercial | Fair; truck-like |
| Off-road geometry | L300 excellent | Good but longer overhangs | Good; heavier feel |
| Aftermarket support | Strong niche global | Strong commercial | Moderate |
| Rust risk | High (esp. L300) | Moderate-high | Moderate-high |
| Interior flexibility | Captain chairs, flat fold | Many seat configs | Work van focused |
| Collector desirability | High (L300/L400) | Moderate; utilitarian | Lower; niche |
| Parts availability (US) | Mixed; improving | Often better | Mixed |
| Alternative rival | 4WD van | 4WD minivan | 4WD minivan |
| Roof gimmick/value | Crystal Lite Roof | Skylite roof (some) | Standard roof common |
| Camping conversions | Very common | Common; more boxy | Common; smaller |
Gallery
Editorial
The most defensible starting point is a documented L400 Space Gear Exceed or Super Exceed from 1995 to 1999 with the 4M40 turbodiesel and Super Select 4WD. That spec gives you Pajero-shared running gear, a proper 4x4 transfer case, and enough cabin refinement to use the van beyond weekends. Skip anything under $15,000 unless you can inspect it directly — a cheap Delica usually means rust or a tired diesel, and repair costs for either tend to exceed the price gap.
The Crystal Lite Roof is the option most buyers want, and it's worth paying for if the seals are intact. Get under the headliner with a flashlight before committing — water stains around the glass panels indicate clogged drain tubes or failed seals, and a full reseal runs four figures. The captain's chairs on Super Exceed and Chamonix trims convert the second row into usable seating and are difficult to retrofit from lower grades.
A rough L300 from a snow-country prefecture without service records is the one configuration to approach carefully. The cab-over platform is sound, but rust kills these vans and a salt-damaged L300 becomes a project, not a driver. A clean dry-climate L300 with the 4D56 cooling system sorted and a recent timing belt is still a reasonable buy — the rust story needs verification before anything else. The D:5 isn't US legal yet for most build years, so US buyers are choosing between an L300 and an L400.
Budget $3,000–$5,000 above the purchase price for the first year. The Delica runs reliably when it's healthy, but every imported example arrives needing something. Plan for the cooling system, timing belt, brakes, and a round of bushings — after that the van will cover another 200,000 km.
FAQ
Citations
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