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Comments
elissa
I do agree that the radio staying on until you actually take the key out of the ignition is a neat feature.
-Frank
Bob
Steve
elissa
Thanks.
elissa
Long hwy trip (~500 mi): 30mpg
Craig
None that I know of and I seriously doubt that we'll see a diesel Forester (or any Subaru for that matter) in the U.S. any time soon.
-Frank
I wonder whether annyone has ever made a production version of a horizontaly opposed diesel. I suspect not as a Google search throws up types of underpants if I search on the phrase.
I would imagine that the forces would be fairly impressive from the head pressure that typically runs about 2.5 times the compression of a petrol engine. Gee, that would really test the head gaskets which are one of the recurent problems of boxer engines.
Cheers
Graham
Elissa
Honda is selling a diesel in Europe right now. Whether they will bring it over here, who knows? If their hybrid works out, probably not.
Bob
Len
Elissa: just ask Honda to document the fact that the engine ran with no coolant at all. If they won't, write a certified letter to the dealer just to be safe. Subaru lets you place a "customer says" call to their 800 line, maybe Honda offers a similar option for you?
You caught it early, so it's probably OK. But an alloy engine block is not happy when it overheats. If you have warped heads and get gasket leaks in the future, this is probably the reason.
Andrew: tell them congrats for me. The only tough thing to access are the spark plugs. The rest is all in bright yellow and easy to find.
luvmuhForester: congrats, and there is a Suggestions board that Subaru follows here on Edmunds.
mpgman: lucky for you, I chart my mileage. Here are the last few tanks on my '98 Forester L:
27.8
27.6
26.1
25.4
25.8
22.8
25.7
25.9
23.6
Funny thing is the 22.8 was with a lawn mower on the roof (not very aerodynamic) and the 23.6 was with a big baby stroller on the roof.
Lesson? Don't carry things on the roof if you want peak mileage.
Good news - the 2005s are far more efficient than mine. Mine is EPA rated for 21/27, the 2005s get 23/30!
-juice
John
Saw a one-off French vehicle in the garage once, I swear he had a boxer twin. Yes, an H2 engine. It was bizarre.
-juice
One thing I've tried lately to boost mileage is being more faithful to "driving by the tach." Especially when entering freeways and going up grades, I try not to exceed 3500 RPM, unless there's traffic behind me. I've had some improvement, but not as much as I'd like to see.
Someone asked earlier about sound system upgrades. I've found that the AM/FM/WB/Cassette/6-CD changer on my 2003 XS needed only the stock tweeter kit and new door speakers all around to sound tons better, all of which I got for under $100. There's plenty of juice in that system to power the Polks with enough bass to make you thankful you didn't lose that rear cargo well storage space to a subwoofer. The only extra item you may need is an RCA-jack harness kit, which is worth the money since it transmits the signals from the receiver to the speakers more efficiently. But if you find a good auto audio shop, a good wiring technician can probably save you even that expense too.
http://webperso.easyconnect.fr/goutelle/aff_photo.php?id=170
Who knows, it may have started life early on as a 2CV chassis?
If I see it again I'll snap a photo.
-juice
Bob
Think about it, Subaru's smallest engine is 2.5l in this country - that's huge!
Scion is having success with a 1.5l. I see no reason why Subaru couldn't go back to selling a 1.8l or so Impreza-based people mover. Maybe a tall hatch back.
-juice
Gene
Bob
Bob
-juice
Bob
That's the segment I think Subaru could enter - smaller than Forester SUV/van. Then let the Forester grow a bit (perhaps Legacy based).
-juice
-juice
I have a 5-month-old 04 X with 4600 miles. Beginning about a week ago, I've noticed that after pulling out of our parking garage onto our street and accelerating (mildly), the transmission sticks in 2nd, and only unsticks if I slow to a near stop or accelerate briskly.
This only happens when the engine's cold, and more interestingly, it only happens when I'm exiting our parking garage. When we've been out of town and parked it elsewhere, there's no sticking after a cold start the following morning.
It may be helpful/instructive to know that our parking garage is built into the side of a hill, and the exit is on the garage's top floor. We are on the second floor of the garage, and it's four levels to the top.
Similarly, I've noticed occasionally transmission's slow to downshift when I'm coasting down a hill (this is an exceptionally hill neighborhood) at 25-30 mph, or when I'm coasting in congested-but-moving highway traffic at similar speeds but level terrain). This has happened with both a cold and a warm engine.
Any ideas of what's going on, and what I should say to my service guys if it comes down to that? The car was given a perfect bill of health at its 3000 mile check-up.
Thanks in advance.
The transmission has a "grade logic" feature that alters upshifts and downshifts on hills. Sometimes it works well (ie, it will downshift sooner going up a hill than it would on a flat road) but other times it seems to get confused (ie, it will downshift at the top of a hill when I least need it). As far as I know, the transmission will only downshift on a downhill run if you are also using the brakes (ie, it knows you want braking). Otherwise it would probably coast.
When driving on a flat road, the transmission will downshift a gear change or two as you are coming to a stop. I beleive there is a downshift at around 18mph or so (we were talking about this at one point). If you are just coasting, it will probably hold the current gear until you apply throttle or brakes. Again, coasting is sort of an inbetween situation.
If I had to guess, I would say the combination of these two feature is giving what seems like flakey behavior on cold / hilly starts. The fact that you don't notice it in other locations seems to support the idea. What you describe is normal when you consider the two scenarios separately, so I wouldn't worry too much about it.
Craig
I appreciate it!
Steve, Host
elissa
BTW - I found the easiest way on my 03 to change the air filter was to remove the whole assembly - takes all of 5 minutes, then you can clean all the crud out of it w/o worrying about getting anything in the throttle body throat. I just put a baggie over the intake so nothing else would blow/fall into it until I was ready to reassemble it. Took me longer to type this than to actually do it.
Larry