Subaru Outback/Legacy Fuel System
My Legacy wagon has 40K miles on it. Saturday, I started it up, smelled kind of oiley exhaust (odd, I thought) and drove to the gas station a couple of miles away. Filled the tank, headed off up an incline.
The car shuddered, jerked violently, lost the ability to accelerate, at which point I pulled over and turned it off. The experience was not unlike the tranny dropping out of my Volvo many years ago.
Dealership mechanics can't figure out what the problem is.
I had heard from a friend that there continue to be problems with moisture getting in the fuel line and from there to the gas filter.
I'd appreciate any thoughts y'all might have - it'd sure be fun to unstump the mechanics!
The car shuddered, jerked violently, lost the ability to accelerate, at which point I pulled over and turned it off. The experience was not unlike the tranny dropping out of my Volvo many years ago.
Dealership mechanics can't figure out what the problem is.
I had heard from a friend that there continue to be problems with moisture getting in the fuel line and from there to the gas filter.
I'd appreciate any thoughts y'all might have - it'd sure be fun to unstump the mechanics!
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Comments
Can you see any coloration of the exhaust? Blue smoke?
I'll take Wes's advice one step further - buy the Isoheet (isopropyl alcohol) rather than the cheaper Heet (methyl alcohol). I am surprise that they still sell the wood alcohol products for automotive use, given that it is not always compatible with rubber fuel system components.
Steve
Well, it ended up being bad gas and faulty O2 sensors (they saved a gas sample for me, how kind). On start up, the exhaust wasn't colored, but did smell bad. The dealer replaced the sensors, drained the tank and replaced the filter. Not a cheap deal.
Thanks for your advice, and I'd appreciate any other comments you might have, especially on "bad gas". In almost 30 years of driving, I've never heard of that one.
Cheers,
Jennifer
These days, 'bad gas' typically is a high amount of water contamination. A flooded parking lot, or the like, probably allowed melting snow (you are in Upstate NY??) into an underground tank. If your area is running 10% ethanol, it tends to suck up and hold the water. I wonder if you could make a case against the station where you last filled?
Steve
Love that idea, except that I'm over 40, I'm starting a new company and I have tweens - remembering basic hygeine is a challenge! Thanks for the edification on the gas; we did have a lot of rain and melting snow the week before this happened, and I'm sure you're right.
Best,
Jennifer
-mike
The full plastic covers capture those vapors and probably compensate enough that it still works.