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Comments
Vishnu and Cobb both say 250+ and dyno #'s were posted on nabisco. :-)
-Dennis
As a point of habit, I usually take the middle ground of every published HP report. C&D rated the 0 to 60 time for the Mazda RX-8 as being 5.9 seconds on the article when dropping the clutch and smoking the tires. However, I had that car and was one of the people who returned it. I wasn't too worried about being rough with it the last couple of weeks so I drove the heck out of it. There is no way under any circumstances that I could get the car to go 5.9 secs as stated by C&D. I believe Motor Trend is too low, C&D is too high. I believe the mid six second range (6.4 - 6.7) is probably the most accurate timing for the XT without any engine modifications. Otherwise, I would think some WRX owners would be baffled. Don't get me wrong, the XT is a great vehicle. I just don't believe the numbers, especially for what the vehicle is marketed as (and its price).
jchagtdi - "I have owned a quick car, a 2002 Nissan Altima 3.5SE. It had a published 0-60 of 6.4 sec. After driving the XT, there is no doubt in my mind that the XT can do the 0-60 in the low 5s" The 2002 Altima had 245 HP with 246 lbs of torque and weighed 3240 lbs (http://www.fast-autos.net/nissan/nissanaltima.html) which would be very similar to what some people here claim the Subaru XT actually has. That's why I believe the numbers are around that 6.4 second figure. It would make a whole lot more sense.
The STi does 0-60 in under 5 seconds.
-Dennis
My wife has the 350Z's upscale brother - an Infiniti G35 coupe, which test very slightly slower 0-60 than the 350Z. The XT eats it for lunch, no contest
Guess what? Their estimate was 0-60 in 5.25 seconds. So C&D are a bunch of slow pokes! LOL
All I can say is DRIVE one, boy does it feel every bit that quick.
BTW, one dyno run had torque at 265 lb-ft!
-juice
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20040308/ap- _on_bi_ge/consumer_reports_glance_1
So owners like us really like our reliable, top-rated Foresters.
Oh, and if you read the magazine, guess who wins the #1 spot in their safety assessment?
Sorry, I know, sounds like a broken record, eh?
-juice
350Z
287 hp @ 6,200 rpm
274 lb-ft @ 4,800 rpm
XT on paper
210 hp @ 5,600 rpm [dyno'd ~240]
235 lb-ft @ 3,600 rpm [dyno'd ~250]
Torque moves the vehicle. How the XT could be fasted off the line over the 350Z is torque. True the 350Z has better torque numbers, but where do they reside from 0 - 4,800 rpm? Was hoping to find some sort of graph between the two.
By dividing the torque into 1k rpm*
350Z = 57 lb-ft/1000 rpm
XT = 69 lb-ft/1000 rpm [using dyno'd est. #s]
The XT should leave the line sooner than the 350Z, even with the torque numbers on paper.
-Dave
*not a proven science, I think.
Also, look at 5-60 acceleration runs, they're still amazing.
-juice
You definitely got a good one, juice. I just got back from the dealer, who charged me $350 to replace one damaged wheel bearing. SOA wouldn't lend any assistance, since I have 84K miles. Makes me think I'll be going back to a Nissan or Honda next time. As much as I like my Forester and my wife's Outback, I've spent all together just too much time, money and aggravation in fixing up all the little annoyances. Clutches, headgaskets and coil packs are killing me. Sorry.
Len
-Brian
-mike
Steve, Host
That's only 1 year for paisan!
DaveM
Hey, my '97 Outback rolled over 45,000 miles last week. All those dang trips to the ski hill are pouring the miles on!
Steve, Host
I expect my Trooper not to have major problems, and I know that I'll get it because it's got a factory Powertrain warranty to 120K. I felt that I wanted to have 100K of no worries so I bought a 3rd party warranty to cover Bumper to Bumper to 100K to pickup where the factory one left off.
-mike
Steve, Host
I'd be upset too if it were my Subie. But, that's what extended warranties are for. Either you get one and gamble that you'll have a repair or don't get one and gamble that you won't have a repair after the standard warranty.
-Brian
Proud XT Owner-Deadeye Sends
If I had known the kind of problems I'd have, I would have bought the extended warranty on my Subaru. I guess I just expected better. And no, Mike, I wouldn't expect H or N to stand behind their cars out of warranty. I didn't expect Subaru to, either, and they did on my head gasket problem. For that, I commend them. It one of the things that will probably swing me back to Subaru for my next vehicle (and I'll DEFINITELY buy the extended warranty next time). But I'm the guy shelling out the bucks for the other problems, and I don't think a wheel bearing should go bad at less than 80K miles. Especially when it is a problem on so many vehicles, and not just mine.
Len
I had a Nissan Max with transmission went twice, one at 90k, and then 110k, what did Nissan do? they did nothing, I wont get Nissan anymore, I dont like their styling anyway, too feminine.....
By the time 60K (5 years) rolled around she needed an exhaust system from the cat back - $500, a new airbag control module $800, the catalytic converter shields were falling off ($200 estimated). I had also replaced the battery at 4yrs, and the power steering pump. The pump was a warranty item at 35K, but only after I explained to the dealer that if he told me that weeping around the pump seals was normal one more time I was going to call Honda.
All that and despite regular cleaning and waxing it needed a paint job - really faded.
I wasn't impressed. Also, Honda doesn't make a wagon anymore as they want to push people into minivans and SUV's. I was glad they didn't make a wagon as it gave me an excuse to shop a different manufacturer. So we bought the Outback.
Larry
My Mazda's front wheel bearing failed at fewer miles than that, and I paid $880 even after crying for a discount from the dealer. $350 is cheap!
The simple explanation from your 200K+ cars is this: luck. Period.
Look at CR again - at 5 years Subaru actually has fewer problems than Honda. They have a large sample, we're talking about a couple of cars, not at all scientific.
Honda gives you 3/36 period. Subaru gives a couple of extra years on the powertrain, and remember, beyond that 5th year they are more reliable long-term. So Honda is a bigger risk.
-juice
The Climate Control improvement is working beautifully. I am researching where I can get a smaller fan which would fit inside the temp sensor tube, instead of outside on the dashboard. No luck so far.
We took out the 65k V8 Cayenne in Crimson Red. It was amazing. I've been in / driven nice cars but the Cayenne really felt different.
Even though you're sitting up high (higher than my XT by a few inches) there is absolutely NO bodyroll when aggressively cornering. I took a hairpin turn and accelerated all the way through and Cayenne just held a very solid line. It was amazing.
I didn't abuse the motor (kept it under 4k) but that V8 can definitely move that car. The brakes were so smooth it felt like we were defying Physics. The steering was just phenomenal. Like I was connected to the road.
You can definitely feel where that extra 40k has gone in comparison to the Forester. Initially I teased my friend saying she was just buying an expensive VW, but after driving it I know that's 100% Porsche.
I'm not comparing the Cayenne to the Forester because that's not fair. But when comparing the Forester to other $25k cars I find it falls short in some key ergonomics/functionality areas. It's really too bad because that's what keeps it from being the truly great car it has potential to be....
If you get a chance, drive the Cayenne. :-)
It's just too much mass, you can teach an Elephant to dance, but you're still dancing with an Elephant.
-juice
-mike
The ride was amazing, even on a moderately rough frontage road (probably the roughest equivatlent road my friend would encounter here in sunny So. Cal.)
The Cayenne felt solid on a whole other level (maybe two or three levels) than the Forester. Again, I'm not comparing the two....but I'm surprised others on here would not be as impressed as I was with that car.
Back to my opinion of the Forester, I'm already looking forward to selling it in a couple of years. It's gonna serve it's purpose but it's annoying lack of a usable climate control and complete design snafu on the darkened, recessed and unlit odometer drive me nuts every time I drive the car.
It's funny how the little things make all the difference.
Plan Terms Classic Gold Plus
$100 DEDUCTIBLE
3 years / 45,000 miles $240 $350
4 years / 60,000 miles $320 $530
5 years / 60,000 miles $430 $700
6 years / 60,000 miles $550 $850
6 years / 80,000 miles $820 $1200
5 years / 100,000 miles $1200 $1500
6 years / 100,000 miles $1250 $1700
7 years / 100,000 miles $1450 $1950
$50 DEDUCTIBLE
3 years / 45,000 miles $300 $450
4 years / 60,000 miles $400 $650
5 years / 60,000 miles $500 $800
6 years / 60,000 miles $700 $920
6 years / 80,000 miles $1000 $1370
5 years / 100,000 miles $1400 $1750
6 years / 100,000 miles $1500 $1900
7 years / 100,000 miles $1700 $2150
$0 DEDUCTIBLE
3 years / 45,000 miles $450 $600
4 years / 60,000 miles $550 $800
5 years / 60,000 miles $650 $900
6 years / 60,000 miles $800 $1100
6 years / 80,000 miles $1200 $1580
5 years / 100,000 miles $1600 $1990
6 years / 100,000 miles $1800 $2170
7 years / 100,000 miles $2000 $2460
link
Steve, Host
We lobbied hard and Patti said we got 8 things in the 2003 model that we had been asking for.
Funny thing is I counted 9.
-juice
Keep the open, airy cabins. Keep fighting curb weight bloat that the Germans seem to be stricken with. Give it the reliability of Acura. Have the interior come close to Audi/VW in look and feel. Have the low-end grunt and power of the German uber sedans.
What do you get? A vehicle that somebody who wants a more direct driving experience than a TL. More reliable and more affordable than BMW 3-series, A4 and Volvo. A great niche to be in! Now, repeat with the Forester, Impreza and new 7-seater.
-B
Stuhall- Can the Forester be improved? Well of course it can and no doubt will be but do you honestly think you're going to find an absolutely perfect vehicle for $25k? Or at any price for that matter?
-Frank P.
You can still see that the Forester has cost controls - look at the peach-fuzz-on-cardboard headliner. But I still think it's better than average for its price class.
The 2005 Outback has nicer materials, including a padded headliner covered in a nice fabric. Even the A-pillar is. The whole interior design is nicer, actually.
While an F-XT manual goes for less than $24k, I don't think we can reasonably demand more than that. Jettas have nice interior, but price a loaded 1.8T wagon and you're talking $28 grand for a FWD sub compact, it's ridiculous.
So I'm going to disagree, keep the Forester at the current price level, send upscale buyers towards an Outback XT or H6, at higher prices. If you insist on an SUV, then the 7 seater is supposed to be the most off-road capable Subaru ever, so buy that.
I don't see Subaru selling a premium compact SUV for $30 grand, I'm not sure they would sell very many.
-juice
Several years ago Subaru and Honda weren't coming close to the German vehicles concerning performance, but now, they are competing quite well with an added bonus of reliability and a better bang for your buck.
By the way, Juice, I missed out on the chance to pick up a year-old Impreza (the buyer for my car back out at the last minute--must have seen the Consumer Reports, too).
Well, I'm going to hold off until the '05 Outbacks arrive. I like the Forester better than the current Outbacks (especially the driving position and visibility), but I could not get comfortable with either MT. I'm hoping the '05 OB somehow resolves this for me, although I'm not really sure how. But as they say in baseball: "You don't win pennants on paper; that's why they play the games."
Zman
I'm sorry for whatever happened; it clearly meant a lot. I can't imagine anyone defending such actions.
Anyhow, thanks for helping me (especially in being prepared for the XT MT experience). I for one appreciate your wealth of information, your wit, and your unique persepective.
Walker
For a light bulb?! $7.50 sounds fair. It's 100 times overpriced.
-juice
John
Mark
Realized how much I hate traffic once I got off the mountain roads and started mumbling under my breath at other drivers on the highway.
Also found out a couple of states (including mine) have passed new regs in regards to road rage driving, including those folks planted in the left lane. Hoooray!
-B
Zman