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KeyFob RKE Programming Procedure: Mitsubishi L400 1995-2001

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KeyFob RKE Programming Procedure-Mitsubishi L400 1995-2001

Mitsubishi L400 1995-2001 KeyFob Remote Keyless Entry Programming Procedure

 

 

How to Program Mitsubishi L400 KeyFob Remote Keyless Entry for the year 1995 and 2001.

 

Key Fob Programming Procedure (Remote)

 

Programming Procedure

Note. If the central locking / alarm system is malfunctioning or a replacement key fob is obtained. The following programming procedure is required to be carried out before the key fob will operate correctly. Maximum of 2 Remotes can be programmed

  • Connect a link wire between Pin 4 and Pin 1 on the J1962 Connector
  • Close all Doors
  • Turn Ignition to ACC position and the back to Off 3 Times with in 10 Seconds
  • Doors Should lock then unlock
  • Press remote control lock or Unlock button once
  • Press remote control lock or Unlock button twice within 10 Seconds
  • Doors Should lock then unlock
  • Repeat for Second Remote

 

KeyFob RKE Programming Procedure: Mitsubishi L400 1995-2001

 

About Mitsubishi L400

The Mitsubishi Delica is a range of vans and pickup trucks designed and built by the Japanese automaker Mitsubishi Motors since 1968. It was originally based on a cabover van and pickup truck introduced the previous year, also called the Delica, its name a contraction of the English language phrase Delivery car. This pickup truck, and a commercial van derived from it has received many names in export markets, being sold as the L300 (later L400) in Europe, Jamaica (discontinued after the third generation) and New Zealand, Express and Starwagon in Australia, and plain Mitsubishi Van and Wagon in the United States.

The production of the Delica light commercial cab-over pickup began in July 1968. It received the chassis code T100, in line with the recently (January 1968) introduced “T90” Canter. Using a KE44 1,088 cc engine producing 58 PS (43 kW), its maximum payload was 600 kg (1,323 lb) and had a top end speed of 115 km/h (71 mph). A year later, in line with consumer needs, a cargo van and a passenger van were added to the line-up. The passenger van, discontinued in 1976, was called the ‘Delica Coach’ and could seat nine people in three rows of seats. The engine was upgraded to 62 PS (46 kW) in 1969.

In March 1971, a slightly facelifted version, called the Delica 75, arrived. This (the T120) received a small grille rather than the naked metal front of the earliest Delicas, and a new 1.4-liter Neptune (4G41) engine rated at 64 kilowatts (86 hp) was added to the line-up. The smaller 1.1-liter engine may have remained available in a 600 kilograms (1,300 lb) version of the truck but if so, it soon vanished entirely. (Source Wiki)

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