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
Besides that, yeah they looked fine if you like four round lights... and they work well, but that's with bulbs that are, um less than DOT legal.
-Colin
My Miata has that light pattern and it is night-and-day better than what DOT mandates.
Black on black would look fine even without paint, IMO.
-juice
If I had a set I'd have at least eighty or ninety watt bulbs in there. ;-)
-Colin
I bet they are E-codes in pattern, too. Aren't they sourced from Europe? They usually come with a disclaimer "for off road use only".
-juice
-mike
Can't confirm the construction, I haven't seen a set in person but I've read that the plastic housings are nice and thin (thin = light = good, ha ha). I probably wouldn't worry about paint. My car isn't pretty up close.
edit: spelling.
Thanks for the info.
Here is what I found out...the console cover which I already have was $25. The console box assembly is right at $100. The remaining two peices are the cupholder rubber and cap at $7 each. The switch case (I think) is the same as the 2001 so I should be able to just pop that in. Bottom line is about $150. Kinda expensive for a mod, but, when you are an anal car nut like me...its worth it!
BTW did you get the little foam doughnuts that sit in the bottom of each cupholder? There appears to be no part number for those.
-r
I bet you could glue some black rubber cut outs there instead.
Actually, one mod I want to do is to put a felt liner on the glove box and all the other cubby holes. I just need to take the time to do it.
-juice
The price you were quoted is a hell of a lot less than what I was quoted in Canadian, the doughnuts I do not have a part # for,my daughter was able to source them for me.
Cheers Pat.
Ed
Stephen
A weekend in the future, I'm sure.
-juice
I have seen Juice's excellent pics of his speaker upgrade in his Forester but it doesn't look like the OB is going to be as easy. In the Forester, there is a snap off cover that allows access to the speaker without taking off the WHOLE door panel.
On the OB, it looks like the whole door panel has to come off. Does anyone know if this IS the case?
Thanks,
Ron
It is not a big deal There is a couple of screwas at the armrest otherwise it is just clips holding the panel on the door.
Cheers Pat.
Jim
-mike
Yeah, the SP sports replaced them.
-juice
-mike
Ed
-mike
hondafriek: Pat, did your switchcase come with new switches or was it just a plastic switch holder? The one I bought came with the switches and the price was only $6.55 for the two switches and the switchplate! I would have thought those switches would be expensive!
Still searching for the rubber doughnuts, though.
-r
six channel amps exist but the only reason to bother with one is if you want to ensure fade capability between pairs. most quality carfi amplifiers are capable of 2ohm stereo loads, and nearly all carfi speakers are 4ohm. thus you can drive pair of speakers per channel most of the time... in fact, I bet your current setup is driving the four door speakers from two channels on the amp, and then the other two channels of the amp are bridged mono for the sub. (or it's only 3 channel)
The rear deck is not an optimal location for speakers, but I'm not sure that I would have cut holes in the rear doors if it were me. Now that it's done I sure wouldn't waste time putting speakers back in the rear deck though!
There are several opinions but here's mine-- and it's fairly common. Car stereos should be like listening to music at home on a proper stereo. Bass is fairly omnidirectional, so although having subs in the trunk isn't perfect it's really convenient and you don't give up much when done right. Extreme attention should be paid to the front speakers, as they provide the vast majority of what you are hearing. A proper soundstage should be in front and around you, not from behind. Sometimes I don't use rear speakers at all and it works well, but if rear speakers are used they should definitely not be as amplified as the fronts.
I am actually considering installing some of my long dormant carfi gear in my impreza this winter, and I'll have to buy a few new pieces here and there. I plan on using a 4 channel amplifier for the fronts and sub(s), 100 watts to each front speaker/component set, and the 2 rear channels bridged for 400w to the sub(s). I'll use a separate 2 channel amp for the rear speakers, which is 50 watts per channel. If I'm lazy (75% chance, hehe) I'll use the factory rear deck locations. If I get creative, I'll use the rear panel area (look in a 2 door impreza, that big spot under the window).
-Colin
The switch,s are expensive think about they are a two way switch with indicator lights built in.
It has a longer ranger than my DE Xenon by ~+600 ft.
and $100 less than mine at that time. Would look good on a Forester. :-)
http://www.puma-access.com/hella/microxenon/microxenon.htm
-Dave
I retired them early (sorry for the pun) and went to BFG Touring T/A based on block cut depth. Although they were a half notch down in overall performance, they remained constant thru life.
Steve
thanks, Theo
-mike
It is a really easy swap and pretty self explanatory as you go along.
Just be careful when you remove the woodgrain panel around the gearshift, move the shifter to low and pull up slightly to free the clips thn pull back, after that it is jusyt a few screws to remove the console.
Cheers Pat.
I sure hope I could find out when my part will be here!
-r
Diffy protector went on with no problems at all. The wheel locks however
looked goofy as heck! I have a '02 Bean and the locks stuck out of the wheel
a good inch and a half! Looked terrible. Dealer has a 20% restock fee and
the part has to come back in original un-opened package. Looks like they are
mine. I of course am not going to put on the wheel locks. They are made for
Subaru by McGard and I am very suprised that the locks were not better
thought out.
But then none of the tire comparisons I've ever seen have actually tested tires at half-worn tread depth. I would really like to see someone like Tire Rack step into this huge void, because my experience has been that a LOT of tires' characteristics change dramatically as they wear. Ideally the test would "age" the tires as well as wearing the tread down.
Regards,
-wdb
Comparing tires for handling (wet/dry/snow/braking/cornering) and durability is probably one of the more difficult things a consumer has to face. I cannot think of too many purchases you make that are this costly and important to your enjoyment of your car, or even to your survival. And yet, for most people, the decision is done without any reliable information at all. Price, size, appearance, salesman's comments - that's about it. Consumer Reports has their problems, but at least the data provided a starting point. Too bad they didn't then shave the tires to half tread and check them again. That would complete the picture.
For a while I did think about recutting the blocks to open the channels, but eventually opted for a change of brand.
Steve
-juice
Vince
Steve
RE92s are not bad when new, but many complain about how they perform after a little wear (half the tread, for example). I don't think CR tests them in that condition.
-juice
One thing you might want to keep in mind is that OE Tires can be slightly different from those you purchase aftermarket even if they're sold under the same model name. Take for example the Yokohama Geolandar H/T. The Yokos that are standard on the Forester S are not the same ones that CR tested in their recent report. I've also heard that the Michellin XGT that you find on Integras are also different from what you buy aftermarket.
Ken
Good point - you are quite right about that. Sometimes an auto manufacturer picks a tire, but then does a modification to 'tune' it to work better with the car. The goal could be to quiet or smooth the ride, adjust an understeer or oversteer issue, etc. Treadwise, they usually look the same, but the belt count or materials may be different.
Usually you can tell if it is a custom job. It actually says "OE Spec xxxxxxxxxx" on the sidewall to prevent accidental mismatching with a 'stock replacement' in the event of a single tire failure. Different compliances could adversely affect handling.
I did not notice an OE Spec identifier on my RE-92's, but I will check again.
Steve
-Colin
(ditched the RE92s at 1k miles)
I went one better than Colin and ditched mine with about 100 miles.
I got lucky and was able to trade mine against a set of Goodrich winter slaloms at my local tire dealers.
Cheers Pat.
-mike
Ho ho ho,
-wdb
you can't link to javascript suffixes, thus your link probably gives everyone else what it gave me-- nothing but a whole bunch of errors.
the tirerack didn't have that selection previously, perhaps they are buying unused Subaru re92s-- tires removed for factory-installed 17", perhaps. or maybe it's just that because of the traffic created by the WRX they do carry the OE-spec re92. either is possible, a while back they sold a whole bunch of surplus / take-off '98RS wheels.
-Colin
-mike
OK we have to understand that alot if not most of the tire buyers out there care more about long lasting all seasons. And you know what? These brick like re92s last a while for a 'performance all season'. After all how many drivers are gonna push their cars to it's limits anyways? So re92s have their niche. We're just not part of that niche.
Jon
FYI it's the spec sheet for RE92's at the TireRack website. Surf tires till you reach the specific page for RE92, then click the link for specs.
There are actually some that are different diameters than others! I'm wondering whether the larger diameter ones are used on the Impreza Sport wagon, whatever it's called. I'm pretty sure it comes shod with RE92's too.
Cheers,
-wdb