By accessing this website, you acknowledge that Edmunds and its third party business partners may use cookies, pixels, and similar technologies to collect information about you and your interactions with the website as described in our
Privacy Statement, and you agree that your use of the website is subject to our
Visitor Agreement.
Comments
Not sure how the numbers really compare, but the Subaru's do seem narrow and in some cases the factory tires look narrow which gives some Subaru's a cheap appearance.
The 7 seater and future full-size car won't have this limitation because I think they have the US market in mind for those.
But cars shared with Japan will likely have narrow bodies.
-juice
Ed
~c
She has just the Legacy, and didn't want a van to drive every day.
Of course now she tells me that she'd be willing to commute in my Forester, which was a change of heart. Could have gotten her the minivan all along. Oh well.
-juice
For me the XT is a perfect replacement for our Forester L.
But she sees....
- expensive (relatively)
- bad mpg
- premium fuel
- too fast (= speeding tickets)
On the positive, maybe we have
- more power = safer?
- better resale?
- moonroof?
Anything else I can use as evidence?? Help me out here guys...
that's the only selling point. there is no utility advantage.
but it's a whole lot of fun. laugh-out-loud fun. slow cars are boring!
you can try to play up the utility of speed, like ease of merging in traffic, decreased passing time on 2 lane roads, etc... but it's really a sham.
F U N
~c
- bad mpg About 10% worse
- premium fuel About 10% more
- too fast (= speeding tickets) Yep :-)
Not only is the XT 45% faster 0-60 than the XS but it's faster than 99% of the vehicles on the road today! Do you need all that speed? Heck no but it's guaranteed to put a smile on your face!
-Frank P.
If you're scraping the bottom of the barrel with an '82 Malibu and choose between using your last $2.38 you found in the couch into the car or washing your clothes at the laundrymat, then yes premium fuel is a real expense to be given due consideration.
It is utterly meaningless for anyone buying and insuring a new car. The cost difference buying premium pales in the overall total cost of ownership for a new vehicle.
At an awful 20 MPG and an absurd 30,000 miles per year, we're talking maybe an extra $250 per year for premium versus regular. And that's a hefty gas bill of ~$2600 even on the cheap stuff. normal people getting 25 MPG and travelling 15,000 miles per year are faced with a staggering extra $100 for 91 octane. wow.
So now take this to heart and beat up--argumentatively of course
~colin
<--does admit to working for an oil company
Even I put premium in the SVX and shortly will be putting premium in the Legacy Turbo....
-mike
~c
-mike
I would like to see Subaru incorporate that feature into every wagon it makes.
Bob
-Frank P.
it's the exact same story when gas prices at the pump climb overnight; the gas you're buying has been paid for long ago and they are just realizing profits because they can. the prices are slow to come down too, even after the market value declines... again, maximizing profit.
much of the companies you think of in 'big oil' do not bother to own retail outlets any longer. chevron would probably have the largest presence there.
~c
If you get an XT and it's fun, I doubt you'll get bored. You could easily own it longer, and enjoy it more.
Besides that, you get a more rigid block and reinforced internals, for better durability. And you get a free cheese grater on the hood. :-)
-juice
Greg
Good one! The only problem is she may use reverse psychology, and say that you'll be away from home more often. I know my wife would say that to me, and accuse me of wanting to do more SBD's.
Mark
Amazing. How do you go back to the 2.5 N/A after that.
It's now when rather than if (waiting for OBT pricing...).
One good thing is that she will likely be able to drive the thing without being intimidated, as there is zero lag.
Greg
-Frank P.
Something I do occasionally with some of the folks from here and "the other board". We go for drives in NNJ/PA with a bunch of Subaru's, just to enjoy the car. The OB XT or Legacy GT would definitely help out there.
Mark
Jon
-Frank P.
I like the 2 swipes, thankyou very much!
-Brian
The new Subie 7-passenger crossover will have to compete with this. There had better be a hybrid model in the works, or Lexus and Toyota (and probably Honda too) will leave it at the (sales) gate.
Bob
I'm hoping that Subaru does something with the hybrid they showed at Detroit. It sounded different and innovative. I agree with you, that SOA must do a hybrid.
Mark
Of course without a hybrid it might have to compete with the Ford Freestyle, so we'll have to wait and see how it's sized and styled.
-juice
I really like the idea of offering dual wheel/tire sets as a series of options. Folks in most areas would get the single set of all season tires, but folks in areas that get sudden, heavy snowfall could get a set of true performance tires on alloy rims for warm weather and true snow tires on steel rims for winter. As it is, you can always pick up a set of extra rims on ebay or at Nabisco, but the OEM tires are neither fish nor fowl and nobody wants to eat the cost of that first set of tires.
Finally, Brian reported in Future Models II that there is rumbling of a better warranty on the 05 Subarus. Given the monster warranties offered by the Koreans and now by Mitsubishi and Isuzu, Subaru is going to lose a lot of customers to makers also offering some form of AWD but wrapping it in a 7/100K wrapper unless SoA also ups its warranty coverage significantly.
Mark
Suzuki's is fully transferable, I'd like to see something like that.
At least match Acura and Mazda's 4/50 bumper to bumper.
-juice
Cheers Pat.
What are the chances?
-Frank P.
I'd wait to see the '05 because even if you do buy an '04 dealers will be more eager. You might have to be flexible on color and options, though.
-juice
It can't be that hard to put in a full size spare. Come on Subaru, please.
Mark
-juice
Bob
Mark
-juice
the donut stinks - but I can't recall the last time the donut did not suffice for emergency situations.
But most don't, you're right about that.
Thing is, with AWD, the diameters have to match closely. What if I get a flat 2 hours away from home and it can't be repaired? You might get stuck having to buy 4 new tires.
-juice
Anyway, I see Subaru as Special and would gladly pay extra for both a full size spare and better tires. Why oh Why do they put the re92's on when everyone (at least everyone I know) hates them?
Sorry for the rant. Thanks for listening,
CUSAFR
A full size spare does fit in the spare tire well of the current Legacy, I know because we have one and did just that. Tire size is 205/60R15 and the full sizer fits once you remove the foam filler that goes over the donut.
Anyone want to buy a donut? :-)
Actually I still have one spare 15" steel wheel is anyone is interested.
-juice