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Comments
Thanks!
Patti
I had sent another referral there, and none of the three complained about their sales experience. Maybe is was an honest mistake?
VDC prices? I've seen 2002 sedans for about $28k, and wagons just under $30k. The 2001s have a regional incentive of $750, if there are any left near you. They sell for around invoice, minus any incentive. They also have special financing on the 2001s.
-juice
Seeing where you live, I believe there are 4 of us now in the upper Westchester, Putnam, Lower Dutchess area from this forum. You, Serge, me and ?
Greg
Snow is coming!
This is a really helpful forum. My wife and I are in the market for a 2002 Subaru Outback. We are trying to decide between the Limited Wagon and the LL Bean edition. I would really prefer the LL Bean due to the H-6 engine. We test drove a Limited (H4) and I was not very satisfied with the highway driving -- little too much road noise, not enough zip in the 60-75 acceleration range.
Wanted some feedback from others who have test-driven both, if these problems disappear in the LL Bean. I seem to get the feeling from reading all the posts that the VDC is certainly quieter - but it is out of our budget range. So any comments on the LL Bean welcome !
Also a lot of people seemed to have problems with the 2001 models having the H-6 engines -- computers had to be replaced, brakes squeaked, there were starting problems in cold weather (we live in Rochester, NY !). Has Subaru addressed these problems in the 2002 models ? Also, some people complained that the heated rear view mirrors and wiper nozzles dont really work that well. Any comments ? We don't want to buy a 28K car and then have go back to the dealer every other month ot have things that dont work efficiently.
Your comments and suggestion are welcome.
Steve
Tos - You must be talking about Smith Cairns. 6 VDCs, hmmm. OK, so now we are up to 5 in the area. Cool.
Prithwish - I have the H4 in automatic. The stick with the H4 is definitely better if you like to have fun. So I guess your decision is the H4 with the stick, or the H6 in automatic form. For us it came down to - do we want to pay the extra money for leather, moonroofs, better stereo, etc. Personal decision. The computer problems have been addressed. The brake squeal only happens once in the morning. That has now been addressed with shims (if you buy, ask the dealer to install the shims). I'm not sure if I am going to have it done since it doesn't bother me. The heated rear view mirrors have been working fine for me so far. However, I haven't tested them in the heart of winter yet - only the frost/mildew we've been getting the last few weeks. No heater on the nozzles, you must mean the wiper blades. Haven't had a chance to test them yet. The heated seats take about 3-5 minutes to heat up, but once there are great. Good luck.
Greg
I don't know if I'd want to hurt a dealer that I'm going to depend on later for any recalls or warranty work (maybe also service in your case), so aim to get most of that $600 back.
-juice
My LLBean is a quiet, powerful TANK, with no want for horsepower, and no engine or starting problems. (BTW, I like the morning brake squeal - it is like the truck back-up warning system AND it wakes me up in the morning.)
Heated mirrors work fine and I didn't even know the nozzles were heated. The windshield heat elements work great to stop wiper ice buildup. BTW, I've never had wiper fluid nozzles freeze up on any car I've owned (even when I lived in Syracuse, NY).
Only problem I've had in 12K is needing the rotors resurfaced (for free). I decelerate too fast coming off the parkway!
Ralph
They're really heated? Wow.
-juice
I paid $28123 for a base model VDC (no extras at all). That was with the $750 rebate.
The dealer holdback on the VDC is $957 according to Consumer Reports (I bought their report with the dealer cost/invoice prices on everything- except the extended warranties). This was about $300 below dealer invoice, but still about $600 above dealer cost. They had no problem going for that amount. The VDC's don't exactly seem to fly out the doors at the price level that they are at, but they seem to be worth every penny.
There isn't much difference between the 2001's and 2002 models. At least on the 2001 you get the rebate.
I may have to rethink that. Gotta get the wife to drive one now. She wants a stick, but that's a great price for all the stuff you get. I figured they'd cost $30k or so.
-juice
Another question: the dealer I will buy from will probably need to order one for me, so I wont get it till next month. Does anyone have any idea if Subaru is going to extend its special financing for November (right now its 5.5% for 60 months)? I am keeping my fingers crossed that it will or maybe give a even better deal like Honda CRVs (3.9 for 60months) !! (well, no harm in being a die hard optimist)
This might be a really naive question, but then I am really ignorant about the meachanisms of a car.
I'm not an engineer, but my guess is regular gas doesn't "ignite" properly or completely.
Bob
I'd bet the special financing will not go away any time soon. CR-V will be replaced in two weeks, so that's a special case.
The H6 has a knock sensor, and will retard ignition timing if it senses engine pinging. This will likely cause a loss of about 4 horsepower going from 93 to 87 octane, but likely no other ill effects.
-juice
Good luck and enjoy your choice!
Andy
Mike
-mike
I've been very happy with the car. At that price, the premium over the LL Bean wasn't that much--they were really trying to get me to buy the Bean over the VDC--probably because folks just aren't willing to pay a $1500 premium for the VDC, so it eats into their profit margin.
I definitely felt the extra oomph in the engine and ameneties inside were worth the premium over the base Outback. I've had (in only a few hundred miles) no probelms with brake noise or other issues discussed here. I put 91 octane in it.
Anyway - MD - you may want to check your charger or your phone. If it is the element, the dealer will take care of it.
Thanks!
Patti
DUKEPHOTO
Greg
Let's see, $28,025 invoice for a VDC sedan. If I wait long enough, I bet the $750 incentive comes back, so you could potentially find a VDC sedan for $27,275. That's tempting.
But the non-VDC would be $25,124 at invoice minus $750 incentive (if/when it comes). That is a pretty big premium for the VDC.
-juice
-mike
...at 6-7pm Pacific/9-10 pm Eastern. Hope to see you there!
http://www.edmunds.com/chat/subaruchat.html
Drew
Host
Vans, SUVs, and Aftermarket & Accessories message boards
I can wait a couple of years, if the 626 holds up (and it's OK, at least for now). Even longer, technically, if we went back to a 2 car fleet.
So as long as things are looking better and better, I'll wait. I'd like to have her drive an Altima, the new 6, and hopefully an interesting Legacy turbo when that arrives. If not, it'll be a VDC for her or a WRX for me, and she'd get the Forester.
This is normal for me. I shop for a car for about 2-3 years before I end up buying it.
-juice
Otherwise get yourself a new cell & a new charger....
take to the dealer......call subaru before that......they have excellent cust.service
popgun near CA/OR border
-Dave
Dukephoto in WV
Greg
-juice
Those were the two most common complaints, and they appear to have been addressed.
-juice
:-D
-Dave
-juice
If you're looking at a used VDC, I would take a long test drive to see if it seems to hesitate. If so, it may need the ECU upgrade. I'd be a little suspicious because it was traded in so soon, so call the 800 number and have SoA do a VIN search for any major issues.
Though the folks that have had the ECU fix and the brake shims have reported good results with those. To test the brakes, reverse it for a bit and then hit the brakes, and listen for any squeel.
Not all of them had those problems, though.
-juice
So far, so good...
Thanks,
Greg
Yes.
When I bought my LLBean (2/01) from Curry Subaru we got a remote start module added on. The finance lady gave me a brouchure during the sale process which implied it would work from 500 ft., and from inside a building. Problem was, they connected the module to the factory alarm, giving it a range of maybe 50 ft. Hello? What's the purpose of a remote start with that range?
Anyway, they ended up having to install a top-of-the-line alarm system for FREE to get the range the finance lady said I would have! They didn't even hesitate once to make the customer happy (this was the service department at this point). That's how to run a business!!!
(I can start my car (actually it's the wife's car) from inside my office building!)
Anyway, now I'm trying to decide between an H6 base sedan and a V6 Passat sedan to be purchased this winter... Need to do some test driving...and wax the 96HondaAccord2dr...
Ralph
Actually, we have a heated 2+ car garage. Need to straighten it out soon to get the cars back in there for the winter.
Maybe I will Curry a shot. I'm thinking about having my diff oil upgraded to synthetic.
Thanks,
Greg
Heated garage? Boy, you guys are living large!
-juice
Greg
A remote start module is only around $150 to $200 (assuming you have an alarm). It's worth it to get into a warm car - we even leave the seat heaters on when we turn the car off - on a cold Feb. morning OR a cool car on a humid morning in August! Also, nothing like going out after a snow storm and brushing already-melting snow off the windows. Well worth it!