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Comments
I've used mine about 3 times on our fleet, usually just for a loose gas cap. I also helped 2-3 friends reset their codes.
It pays for itself the first time you use it. Mine is a $99 Actron model. It worked on a 98 Forester, an 02 Legacy, and even a friend's Chevy Suburban. Go figure.
Winter I run snows on stock rims in stock size.
Summer/track I run 235-45-17s w/o any rubbing problems on Rota Battle 17x7.5 rims. I will be going to 245-40-17s on Rota Torques 17x8, may go to 255-40-17 depending.
-mike
Upon further inspection, I saw that the anterior edge of the rear spoiler is rubbing against the door jam. It is difficult to get a clear view of where the two surfaces meet (because the clearances are so darn tight) but it looks like the spoiler is rubbing away at the finish each time I open the door and hear the squeak. Sure enough, I wiped away some fine dust that looks to be paint rubbing off.
I definitely plan to bring it in to the closest dealer to have it repaired/looked at/replaced, but what do I expect from this? Will they just unscrew the rear spoiler from the liftgate and try to reposition it? What about the two spots at the joint where the paint has rubbed off? I just imagine them throwing me a jar of touch up paint and calling it a day.
Is removing the heat shield dangerous? Why would Subaru put them on if they were not needed? The certainly are flimsy!
My '02 started rattling around 60k and the dealer could not find the source of the rattle (they took my daughter's toys out from under my seat to show me they had "tried" to find the rattle even though I told them I suspected the heat shield :mad: ). Needless to say, I had to crawl under the car to bend and re-attach the heat shield. No rattles in over 30k.
Matt
Thx!
-mike
-mike
I want to buy brake pads for my 02 Bean and TireRack has two sets - one for pre June 02 and one for post June 02 Outbacks. How can I tell when my Outback was built? VIN is 4S3BH806727636607, Model is BHECYDE and Code is U1TW
Many Thanks!
Matt
-mike
That is where I looked first - went back after your reply (in case I was temporarily blind the first time) and it turns out it is on the door itself - 1/2 way down the side, almost on the bottom. Turns out it was a 12/01 manufacture -
Thanks!
Matt
Thanks in advance,
Kate
Also, that flimsy shield at the very front of the car- they did some inspection work during the 50 point check a few months back and forgot to fasten it...it ended up hanging down for a few hours until they came back to fasten it. There seem to be some odd "shields" going on under there!
-mike
May you you all become saints!...Ah, to the point....I have a '99 OB that I love and have had to only replace the usuals. Anyhow this awful rattle and distinctive whine of a bearing going out on a pulley. I have checked the tension in the belt seems fine (not a mechanic) does not get worse when I turn AC on and is horrible when I first start and let it warm-up. It does not seem to be effecting performance, and does quiet when I start driving. It doesn't happen always but when it does I draw looks from the whole parking lot, and have now been starting to drive before she warms up to avoid the looks ,horrible I know with out letting her warm-up (cutting my nose off to spite my face) Is this a shroud or pulley or something I should really worry about? I am out of warranty at this point, so she's been great to me should I just :confuse: send her into the shop or can I fix myself? :confuse:
Thank you
It seems like more and more shops (and dealers) are trying to push "flushes" and additional maintenance aside from what's actually mentioned in the owners manual.
While I understand what a fuel filter, and other items actually do, what about the flushes? Every oil change I typically add a bottle of Chevron Techron into the tank to help maintain the fuel system, and yearly I replace the wiper blades and air filter.
Is it necessary for "oil flushes," fuel system flushes, brake fluid flushes, transmission flushes, power steering flushes, coolant flushes, etc? I've owned my Civic for 8 years now and I've never done one of these flushes despite my dealer trying to convince me otherwise.
I've heard that some modern cars don't have a distributor? Is this accurate, and if not, how often does a distributor typically need to be replaced?
Direct ignition
Modern engine designs have done away with the distributor and coil, instead performing the distribution function in the primary circuit electronically and applying the primary (low-voltage) pulse to individual coils for each spark plug. In some cars, the coils are mounted together in a 'coil pack'; others utilize a coil located very near to or directly on top of each spark plug (Direct Ignition or coil-on-plug). This avoids the need to switch very high voltages, which is very often a source of trouble, especially in damp conditions. These systems also allow finer levels of ignition control by the engine computer, which assists in increasing power output, decreasing fuel consumption and emissions, and implementing features such as Active Fuel Management.
The `09 Legacy has the direct ignition.
Flushes should be unnecessary if a proper maintenance schedule is performed. Flushes are usually indeed extra items.
While I understand what a fuel filter, and other items actually do, what about the flushes? Every oil change I typically add a bottle of Chevron Techron into the tank to help maintain the fuel system, and yearly I replace the wiper blades and air filter
Changing filters is part of regular maintenance, not flushes. Changing the fuel filter, air filter, and oil filter at regular intervals (although not the same ones for all) is important. I feel that changing these and their fluids negates the need for "flushes" or additives.
Is it necessary for "oil flushes," fuel system flushes, brake fluid flushes, transmission flushes, power steering flushes, coolant flushes, etc? I've owned my Civic for 8 years now and I've never done one of these flushes despite my dealer trying to convince me otherwise.
I would say no. I use "tier 1" gas (BP usually) almost exclusively from the same station. I don't see the need for a "fuel system service" based on the additive package that is already in the gasoline. Changing the oil at regular intervals should prevent sludge build up and all the stuff the "flushes" are supposed to help.
Transmission can actually be bad for the transmission, stirring up debris and crud that should just stay in the bottom. Changing the fluid by draining and refilling is a better approach, IMHO.
Brake fluid is hygroscopic, it absorbs moisture over time. That moisture causes corrosion in the master cylinder, the brake pistons, and lines. It also hampers the fluid's ability to transfer heat, adding to fade and making the brakes feel "squishy." It should be "changed" at some interval (I think Subaru's 2 years is pretty pessimistic, but okay...I normally do it with a brake job on other vehicles).
I've heard that some modern cars don't have a distributor? Is this accurate, and if not, how often does a distributor typically need to be replaced?
The distributor is pretty solid on most cars, it is a failure mode if it requires replacement. The points and condenser (in really old cars) or the cap and rotor (most cars) need to be replaced from time to time (part of a "tune up" whatever that means these days). Typically the parts aren't real expensive. Some distributor-less vehicles still use spark plug wires which should be replaced periodically.
A lot of newer cars are "coil on plug" where the ignition coil is directly on top of the spark plug. If that breaks, it is a failure mode not a maintenance item. VWs have had some issues with this in the past. The up-side is there is no cap, rotor, or wire to replace, so they are essentially maintenance free.
I hope this long winded answer helps a little bit and doesnt get picked to bits too much.
A smaller rattle which the dealer has heard and thinks is in the rear left of the car. The dealer replaced the rear left shock absorber, which didn't stop the rattle.
Dealer's technician probably checked a few other things out which do not appear on invoices. He told me I may have to live with the rattle, which I didn't like to hear on a new car.
I am taking the car back to the dealer on Tuesday, having told the dealer that he must either fix the rattle or give me an extraordinary deal on purchasing a new car. I plan to tell dealer to check the heat shield, which I gather from other emails on the Edmunds site has caused others a problem.
Any other thoughts?
The best description I can provide is that it's a mechanical ticking sound, that is MPH related, not RPM oriented. Starts after a few minutes at freeway speeds, frequency varies with speed, then goes away as I slow to about 40. Sounds a bit like a variable-speed fan would if there was a clearance issue with one blade. It's just subtle enough that I can't tell where it's coming from, but just loud enough to be a bit annoying. Car drives fine/as usual. I'm thinking a CV joint/wheel bearing is trying to tell me something vs. (I hope it's not) the front transaxle.
Turning the volume up in the meantime
Cheers!
Paul
I am wondering if, instead of replacing the transfer case (an expensive job), that it could be perhaps removed and not replaced? I would be ecstatic to have at least FWD working! My own mechanic does not know.
I have tried the fuse to deselect AWD but it doesn't work. I am assuming that whatever damage has been done to the transfer case is currently keeping this disengagement mechanism from functioning.
Also I am wondering if it is necessary to replace the transmission when a transfer case is damaged? No one has suggested this and I have not found any suggestion that when a transfer case gets chewed up the transmission itself is likely to have been damaged. How likely is it that transmission has been damaged and will need to be repaired also or replaced?
First, the vitals: it's an '02 Outback 2.5 wagon, MT, 96K miles. As far as car maintenance goes, I'm pretty much a novice. I used to change my oil, air filter, plugs, etc on my previous cars, but have had the dealer do the work on the Subie.
The issues:
1) I tried to change the spark plugs yesterday and, after pulling #1 and #2, I saw a decent amt of oil on them. I've smelled some burning recently but I couldn't really tell if it was oil or something else - I guess it was oil. I did some quick searching here and it's sounding like blown head gasket. It is critical that I replace it now, or can I wait about 10K when I have the timing belt replaced?
2) Given the tight spaces around the engine, how on earth do you pull the plugs on this car? I've had my dealer do it in the past, but decided to save some $$ this time and do it myself, but there was no way I could get a spark plug socket, extension bar and wrench near #3 and #4 (and #2 was really, really tight). Given that, I put the old plugs back in #1 and #2, rather than have mismatched plugs.
3) I did manage to change the air filter - I'm not totally helpless! Added windshield washer fluid too (not to the air filter - I put the fluid in the right place)!
4) Driving in to work this morning (first time to drive after the air filter and aborted spark plug changes), engine sound is totally different. At less than full throttle, car sounds fine; at full throttle, it sounds like I have a hole in the exhaust (in fact, the first time I heard it was on the highway while I was next to a mid-90's Civic with the spoilers, rims, window tints, etc - I thought the noise was coming from him and his custom muffler!). It's definitely coming from under the hood, not underneath or towards the back (plus, as I said, at less than full throttle the car sounds fine, so it's definitely not exhaust). I checked the plugs this morning to make sure they were connected properly and all looked good there. Maybe the air filter is ajar inside the housing; I'll check that at noon. Those were the only things I touched under there; any other thoughts?
Thanks!!
Moral of the story: I won't quit my day job to become a Subie mechanic.
I've been working on Subies for years...
Brake Flushes every 2 years is mandatory (for any car) as brake fluid is hydroscopic and absorbs moisture. When the moisture embeds itself in the brake fluid and you overheat the brakes it will boil the moisture out of the brake fluid, thus creating air pockets in the brake lines which are compressed under heavy braking and then you have no pedal when you need it most.
Coolant drian/fill every 30k miles.
Fuel filters on the pre-2.5L turbo models (around 2005 they went to in-tank non-servicable fuel filters) every 30k miles.
Never did an oil flush in a car ever.
Automatic transmissions should be drained and filled every 20-30k miles
MT transmissions and differentials should be checked every 30k, and replaced at 60k miles.
30k interval for plug changes on NA cars, 60k interval for Turbo cars.
That's about it. People love coming to our shop cause we typically charge a lot less than the dealers!
-mike
Somebody in "Answers" posted a question---they apparently messed up their transfer case on their '98 Subie Outback by using different size tires and they wanted to know if they could disconnect something and just run on FWD for a while. Sounds radical but I really didn't know the answer. I figured the default was something like 50-50 and so that wouldn't work very well if at all.
Thank you
-mike
-mike
-mike
It may be just something we 08 owners have to live with ...
Lots of on-coming drivers flash their lights at us during the day because of the "high beams". The dealer says there isn't anything wrong (of course they are working on it in a garage).
Does anyone else have this problem? Does anyone know where the light sensor is that causes the DRL to dim when I go into a parking deck?
We land up driving around with our low beams on all the time to avoid the "high beam" problem.
-mike