Did you recently take on (or consider) a loan of 84 months or longer on a car purchase?
A reporter would like to speak with you about your experience; please reach out to PR@Edmunds.com by 7/22 for details.
A reporter would like to speak with you about your experience; please reach out to PR@Edmunds.com by 7/22 for details.
Options
Subaru Impreza WRX Wagon
This discussion has been closed.
Comments
Good performance all-season. I'd consider the Dunlop SP 5000 as a competitor, but not the BFG Traction T/A... IMHO there are only two BFG tires I'd buy-- KO and KD. Totally different tires than what you need, but leaders in their market segment.
~Colin
~Colin
It seems that better noise insulation, better looking (at least to me), available moonroof and heated seats, and 2 years free maintainence services from the 9-2X may make the car to be more attractive than the WRX wagon.
I like WRX wagon because the sedan does not give me more enough headroom and trunk storage.
Any reason I should buy a WRX wagon instead ?
(I wonder if I should bring a 9-2X to a Subaru dealership or a Saab dealership after the warranty expired...)
yeah, you never know what someone's frame of reference is. comparing the customer reviews of dissimiliar tires is really bad on tirerack for example-- otherwise you'd think that the best touring all=season is close to the dry performance and handling of the better summer tires, and of course that's far from the truth. but the all-season might have high 9.x ratings!
~Colin
IIRC, the suspension of the 9-2X is supposed to be a little softer instead of better handling. I'm sure you could search some of the early magazine reviews.
You get a longer bumper-to-bumper warranty with the Saab 4 yrs vs. 3 yrs, but Subaru's powertrain warranty is 5 years/60k miles. Subaru techs might be more knowledgable, but I'm sure that varies dealer to dealer. My dealership has a few Senior Master Subaru techs and they also have some nOObs. :-)
-Dennis
I'd stick with the original.
-juice
- They're out driving and never came back.
- They're driving the FXT or LGT now.
- The craze simmered down.
-Dave
Thank you, drive through.
-Dennis
No way I'll be switching to an F-XT or LegGT.
Now a F-STi or Leg-Sti wagon, that could be a different story...or maybe just an urban myth.
But a 6sp in the WRX would be most sweet, and would address one of the commonly voiced weaknesses. Rumour about jumping up to the 2.5T in the WRX would also be nice. They could tune it to the 250 of the Leg and it would put the WRX well out in front of the competition the way it was in 02 when it debuted in NA.
Nicholas - still lovin' it.
I'm keeping the bugeye :-)
-Dave
Can I put my stock WRX wheels on a Forester??? I know the offset is not exactly the same, but how much problem can there be with , what 5mm difference???
How about if I get a new OB(probably be the VDC so she gets all the safety gizmos), can I put 16in WRX wheels on that(for snows)??
Not likely will work for the Forester or the '00+ OB/Legacy [+48mm offset].
-Dave
They need an STi suspension under it to keep up with a WRX, or at least come very close in handling.
-juice
-Dave
-juice
Bob
It seems to be grinding regularly as I exit the freeway, come to a stop at the light, then try to engage 1st again...it's like the transmission is still spinning even when I'm stopped, so when I try for 1st, it grinds. It also seems to be doing it in parking lots when I'm rolling too slow for 2nd and try to get into first.
In all the previous 30,000 miles, I've probably ground the gears enough to count on one hand...now it seems to be a daily occurance. My driving style hasn't changed, only the fluid.
Any suggestions?
Brian
Your synchros might be bad. The 1st and 4th gear synchros were replaced on my FXT. When I would get the grind, it didn't sound like a typical missed gear grind. It was more of a crunching sound.
-Dennis
it spins with mediocre force when the clutch pedal is down, too.
I'd use the Subaru gear oil. doesn't grind, even if it is a little like churning butter on a really cold winter morning.
~Colin
~c
-Brian
-Dennis
Not sure what you mean here, but the FXT's steering wheel is indeed a Momo wheel. It just doesn't have the Momo logo stamped into it. I really like the three-spoke wheel in my '05 FXT - fits really nicely to hand - and I don't find I spend that much time looking at it.
As for road feel, it's a matter of horses for courses. Foresters are taller, less aerodynamic, have a higher center of gravity, greater ground clearance, longer suspension travel and are more softly sprung than WRX wagons. The idea is that Forester owners may take their cars onto surfaces other than billiard-table-smooth pavement.
You don't throw a Forester around a bend the way you do a WRX but you learn to compensate. The right wheel/tire combo plus suspension bits can help reduce body roll and understeer but in the end you're still going to have to deal with the differences in body type. Take that too far though and you lose the Forester's rough road ability.
OTOH with the FXT you do have more power to put to the pavement coming out of the bends than you do in the current WRX wagon...and there's something to be said for that.
Ed
-juice
So I picked up a 02 WRX wagon with 30k from a L.A. dealer about a year ago and have frequently noticed a noise on "colder" mornings that I would assume is this "piston slap" as it goes away after a few minutes and is matched to rpms. I now have 45k and I'm not sure if I should be nervous about it or not? It would seem after "mrk610"s post that I shouldn't but I don't plan on living in the warmth of L.A. forever and would imagine it would get worse? Any thoughts?
Brian
Of course the noise is still present. Now it hums from 58 to 61 mph in any gear load or no load.
Any Ideas? By the change in speed at which the noise is generated I still suspect the diff. I wonder if it was installed wrong or if I got a bad one (I doubt it).
Don
Fluid level OK? I assume they used dino 75w90?
-juice
B
-juice
How does the rear LS work? It doesn't require a LS additive so I am GUESSING no clutch pack.
My left tires are worn a little more than the rights (darn onramps only go in one direction) but they are well within the 1/4 inch limits when measured at the center of the tread. Measured at the outside edge it is still under 1/4 inch but close....what happens when the baby spare goes on?
Thanks for the ideas fellas.
But I gotta disagree w/ your implying that billiard-table-smooth roads are required for the WRX. IMHO, the outstanding feature of the WRX is its ability to handle aggressive driving on very bumpy roads - something most other performance cars can't do.
(The other outstanding thing is easy heal-toe shifting
-juice
Understood, no harm no foul. Having driven both I do believe that the FXT is better suited to rougher roads, stock-for-stock; but either is better in handling the rough stuff than most of their competition.
There's a growing number of people who've discovered and bought FXTs, then lowered them with struts/springs from WRX/STi takeoffs, Forester STi (via Japan) or aftermarket (Tein is the primary source IIRC?). Don't get me wrong, I'd love for my FXT to go flatter through the corners but I think something inherent in the FXT's character would be lost in the process if you "drop" the car too much.
Ed
I'm [___] this close to getting STi springs. My main concern is my bigger tires though. Someone on nabisco did it with 225/55/17's and is getting slight rubbing (on the frame??) at full lock.
oops, turned this into a Forester discussion. ;-)
-Dennis
I know about the STi springs guy; he PM'ed me over at nabisco a couple of times looking for advice on the 225/55-17s with that setup.
Ed
Although I'd love to drive the F-STi, I expect it would be worse off pavement than a stock WRX given the lowered, stiffer suspension. Still, I'd love the chance to find out.
-juice