The color of the sensor is black and is location is behind the trasmision
It is located in the data link connector. There are three black wires. It is the bigger of the three black wires.
The Galant color code should be located on the firewall; sometimes it may be in the driver's side door along the front A pillar. Another possible location is the area near the radiator, where the hood closes. I have an '03 Galant and my color code is located on the firewall passengers side, the 2000 I think is on the driver's side firewall. You may have to clean dirt off of it to see it.
OK i have a '93 Galant of my girlfriends that I am trying to wire. This is what I found that helped me out the most. Go down to Chrysler/Mitsubishi Joint and it will show you the color in the dash...and the Modern harness color. http://www.installdr.com/Harnesses/DCP-Wiring.pdf That helped me alot. Only problem its says is not to use the illuminator or dimmer wires.
If your not sure, you can back flush the entire cooling system and then use any color you want. Just be sure to never mix the two kinds.
what two wires are the iat from the maf sensor on a Mitsubishi eclipse gs
I think itsredishgreen
The red wire is the hot wire. The black wire is the ground wire. The green wire is the speaker wire. The white wire is the auxiliary wire.
Peak and Prestone both have a Universal fill (mixes with any color OEM antifreeze) premix antifreeze/coolant that works very well
Looking for the ESC myself....the Knock Sensor wire is blue though.
Green with a white line
The chasis is the ground. There is no wire.
2002 Mitsubishi Galant headlight bulb replacement: Purchase the correct replacement headlight bulb(s) first, before disassembling the vehicle. See sources and related links below for replacement bulb information. Then consult your owner's manual for the headlight bulb replacement procedure. As simple as it sounds, the owner's manual is the best place to start for bulb replacement instructions and illustrations. You may want to consider replacing both left and right at the same time in order to keep brightness and color equal (optional).