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Exocet

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Posts posted by Exocet

  1. My 94 Legacy has started to develop some strange electrical problems which appear to be related to the ignition switch. Occasionally, the starter fails to turn over when the ignition switch is turned to start. Sometimes the car fails to stop running when the ignition switch is turned to off. Accoding to my wife, both problems are intermittent. Of course, it never happens when I drive the car. It sounds like a bad ignition switch to me. What does everyone think? It looks pretty easy to replace.

  2. I've had the following problems on my 94 Legacy:

     

    1) 60K miles - water pump started leaking

    2) 100K miles - coolant sensor failed

    3) 126K miles - alternator bearing failed

    4) 145K miles - rear wheel bearing got too noisy.

     

    Other than that, the car is still original (except wear and tear items). The struts are showing some softness when there is a full load in the car. Around 100K miles it started to develop a slight rear-end whine. It was gotten a little worse in the last 45K miles, but not enough to worry about.

     

    We'll see what 200K miles brings.

  3. Thanks for the informative response. The car seems to warm up normally, within 3-4 minutes of normal driving. The car doesn't have any noticeable cold weather driveability problems. The coolant sensor went bad about 40K miles ago and was replaced. That doesn't mean it isn't going bad again, it just isn't bad enough to cause driveability problems or trip the "check engine light".

     

    This morning, after sitting all night in a 35-40 deg F garage, I drove the car about 10 miles at 65-70 MPH. The torque converter didn't lock up until after driving 7-8 miles. The outside temp was about 35 deg F.

     

    The car does have a block heater, but since it is parked in a garage, it has rarely been used.

     

    I suppose I should pull the coolant sensor and check it, or just replace it, if it isn't too expensive.

  4. My 94 Legacy's automatic transmission takes longer to lock-up the torque converter in the winter. I know that it should, as it waits for the transmission to get up to temp before locking up. However, it seems a bit erratic in terms of the distances you have to drive before lock-up occurs. For similar ambient temps (20-30 deg F), most of the time it locks-up within 1-2 miles of driving, other times it goes 10 miles without locking up. It only behaves this way in the winter. During the summer, this doesn't happen. Lock-up is almost immediate. This would appear to indicate a possible problem with the temp sensor in the transmission. But, it could be more serious I suppose. Anyone have anything similar happen?

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