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Comments
It happened to me once, years ago. I was so ticked I couldn't see straight. I then made it my life's mission to bad mouth that dealer, by telling the truth no less, whenever possible. Wouldn't have been so bad but the moron smoked in the car.... and left the evidence in the ash tray. Aarrrgggh.....
Larry
-Frank
Happened to a friend of mine when he was about to take delivery, the guy who prepped his Chevy was smoking when he drove it up to him.
He actually bought a different car. They were lucky he stayed with that dealership at all.
-juice
on the Forester XT...somewhat between posts 15270 and 15280, I think......
At any rate, that's impressive fuel efficiency, IMHO............ez
Last I knew, Subaru didn't make any '03 XTs and mine is definitely an '03 but just an ol' XS... sigh. But I love it anyway, all 27.5 mpg. BTW my best was 31 mpg on an all freeway 700 mpg trip Fresno to San Diego and back.
John
-juice
Thanks in advance for any thoughts.
There have been some complaints (including my own) regarding "Hal" ( the computer control unit for the automatic climate control ) and his apparent disregard for occupant temperature levels. However, the unit on the XS and better has been changed.
Note, the "X" has an identical AC and ability to keep comfortably cool temps in the vehicle. Just avoid dark colored cars and dark interiors, and consider some type of tinting. I haven't bothered with the latter, but some folks in hot climates recommend it.
John
-Frank
Craig
Regards,
Kyle
-mike
Steve, Host
Yes, fluids and filters is huge at 30K intervals as well as checking/inspecting several systems. Considering your bumper to bumper warranty expires soon, it's good to have them perform that big service just before. Gives you a little piece of mind that you're all taken care of before you roll off that warranty.
In general, I think dealers are rip-offs though. They charge far more than an independent shop would for the same service. I plan to do what I can do myself for the 15K and 30K intervals (I can do the filters and fluids) then bring it in to the dealer for the rest - build some good-will with them since I am a big user of warranty work and I like my dealership. :-)
Elissa
Otherwise, I can get the fluids/filters myself.
John
Craig
Both get 5 stars front and 5 stars rear from the NHTSA in the NCAP test, but the IIHS test for the Forester resulted in a Rating of Good, 2nd best in class, while the Legacy earned just a Marginal.
Cheaper and safer is better if you ask me!
-juice
Note, it is all relative, who knows what kind of vehicle they are going to get hit by? If it is a truck or a bus at 30+ mph, it doesn't really matter much what they put in the side of the car.
John
-mike
John
-mike
Craig
I can get a Vibe fwd auto with head curtains, anti-skid, leather and a few other goodies for $18k with all rebates. A Forester X with after market leather, trailer hitch, bike attachment, cargo nets, dimming mirror, etc., will run me $22,800.
What did I miss? What do you think? Thanks.
'24 Chevy Blazer EV 2LT
I know you can get a Vibe/Matrix with AWD, but it's not a very advanced AWD system, and you still don't get ground clearance.
Also as far as engines go, I think Toyota and Pontiac package the various combos differently. Regardless of which 1.8L engine you get -- the 123HP or the 173HP, I would expect the Forester's torquey 2.5L H4 engine to be a lot more powerful and useful for daily driving.
The Vibe and the Forester drive a lot differently, so perhaps a test drive will decide for you.
Craig
So you loosen it with a 4" extension, trade to a 3", then continue, etc.
Forester has AWD and the cargo space is a lot roomier (an AWD Vibe has 123hp so that won't even get out of its own way).
Forester has good torque and better utility, basically. You can carry more and in any weather.
Vibe is more of a hatchback. It's a good choice is your 2nd car is something bigger, but IMO it's way too small to be your primary hauler.
Also, the non-AWD models have a primitive torsion beam suspension that isn't even fully independent. Take both over a bumpy road and you'll feel the difference.
Forester is 4 wheel indy and can go over those long speed bumps at 40mph without bottoming out. Vibe could probably take them at 25mph.
-juice
John
Of course the intake on my 1998 is different than on any other year Forester, so YMMV.
I didn't have wobble extensions but I doubt they'd help much. Angle drive might help a tiny bit.
Check the clearance there, you have like 2-3".
Maybe one of those super-flat ratchets that are meant for tight clearances.
-juice
1) I thought Subaru was discontinuing the Baja after MY 2005?
2) Wobble extensions I think were unnecessary to remove my '01 Forester's plugs if I recall. And after cracking other plugs trying to remove them with those extensions, I'm no fan.
3) Depends on the actual year how much of the intake needs to be removed... On my '01 I had to remove the easily-accessible parts of the intake - no biggie. I think that was all of two screws if that. What was more of the PITA was that I had to remove the battery completely AND had to have an assistant hold the windshield washer fluid reservoir out of my way since it couldn't be easily removed without spillage and electrical disconnects. When I was done I'm sure my knuckles were bleeding. I put platinums in though so I wouldn't have to go through THAT again for a while. Now I've got the turbo ... and to be honest, I can't find the plugs to save my life. They are buried beneath a whole lot of other plumbing and may not even have flexible wires leading to them. Ugh.
Craig
Juice, something I've run in to. My Forester was built in early '98. There was a design change around July '98. When you need to get parts for maintenance it's somewhat of a headache. From what I've been told, the late '98 Foresters went to the 30k copper plugs. I had a similar problem when I had to buy the upper radiator hose...two different hoses for the same year.
Jim
-Frank
Brian
All Forester have side airbags, as do the Legacy and Outback. The Forester has earned top marks in crash testing.
The Outback just earned top marks for the side & front crashes. SOA published the results on their site below:
http://www.subaru.com/index.jsp
The Legacy side crash ratings are a mystery, as they have the same side protection as does the Outback. The only difference is the ground clearance, which could affect as how the crash sleds hit the door, thus giving different results.
All Subarus have AWD, which is far better than 2WD with traction control.
Bob
FYI the new Toyota RAV4 also scores well in the safety arena and comes with standard traction control and offers optional side head-protection airbags. So although I prefer the Forester, the RAV4 might be worth looking at.
-Frank
-Frank
Bob
Thanks.
What it does -- if you step on the gas pedal the throttle will only use what it needs to accelerate rather than going wide open and wasting some gas. So the engine only burns as much gas as it could possibly use to get going, instead of making excess heat/noise/etc... that you'd get by flooring it without throttle control. In other words, the throttle control won't let you waste gas -- it only throttles to as much as the engine can efficiently use. Real good idea.
Craig
The '05 with a manual tranny does get a remarkable 23/30 mpg. But that'll save you hundreds, not thousands, over its lifetime in your garage.
Jim: I believe I have the revised '98 model, mine was built in April 1998.
catherine: all Foresters since model year 2003 have had side airbags that protect both the head and the torso.
Makes shopping for you easy - any 2003 or later gets a Good rating from IIHS and 5 stars front plus 5 stars rear from NHTSA in side impacts.
While we're at it, Best Pick IIHS frontal offset and 5 stars front passenger and 5 stars drive on the NHTSA front crash test.
-juice