
blackbart
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Rear Wiper?
blackbart replied to ericem's topic in 1990 to Present Legacy, Impreza, Outback, Forester, Baja, WRX&WrxSTI, SVX
I think the relay is located on the left rear shock tower, I can let you borrow one to see if that is the problem, just pay shipping both ways. -
I don't go through many per car, just got a lotta cars. Where I live dosn't help either, dirt roads, off roads.....some get torn on debris, some just got old and rot. Currently have seven Legacys, five "on the road", one project, one parts car. Been driving nothing but Subs for 25 years. Changed alot of axles!
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If you have air in the system the water will not move. Check for a head gasket failure, this isn't all that easy on the Subs, most of the symptoms make it look like a bad radiator, water pump.....etc. With the engine cool, top off the coolant in the radiator and up to the "fill" line on the overflow tank. Start the engine and look into the overflow tank, you may see bubbles for a short time but if they continue for more than a few minutes the exhaust could be blowing into the coolant...bad head gasket. You may even want to try removeing the radiator cap while the engine is cold and starting it, look for bubbles there also.
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I went through the same thing when the HG went on my 90 legacy, turned out that the swing in the temp (as shown on the dashboard)was the air in the system causing the coolant to get "stuck". When you sharply increase or decrease you speed you can "splash" the water through the air pocket. Now the cooler coolant that was stuck in your radiator makes it's way to your temp sender and it appears that the problem is comeing and going.
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There is a guy near me in Northeast PA who changed the head gasket on an Outback, the labor was $500 and he changed the timeing belt and the water pump. Don't know what the parts cost. I saw him doing it and asked him about the labor because my wife has a 98 Outback 2.5, it's just a matter of time before I am in there.
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Head gasket. The HG leak caused an air pocket to stop the coolant flow, when you came to a stop the coolant rushed ahead through the air pocket allowing the cool fluid from the radiator to get to your temp sensor. This drove me nuts until I figured it out. I thought that I had some kind of junk in my system that was cloging and un-clogging the system. Head Gasket.
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Head gasket. No doubt in my mind. The air pocket got there due to the leak, the air will not let the coolant move. I found that if your have no warm air from your heater the coolant is not circulating. I bet that the next time it gets hot and you quickly come to a stop you may see the temp drop sharply. The water is forced to move foward through the air pocket. You will also feel heat from your vents for a little while. Try it.
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You have to press it out, of course you have to remove the ring carrier first. I wouldn't do this just to clean it up, can't you tape off the nut area instead? When you go to put things back together you will have to check for backlash, the spacing between the teeth on the ring and pinion. This is done with shimms. (Don't take it apart.)
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My 94 did the same thing last week, the ground terminal on the battery was ugly, I cleaned it up and the problem was gone. I had a spare starter in my hand, ready to swap it in, then I checked the connections on the battery and the starter. The battery terminal looked ok from the outside but there was alot of corosion once I pulled the connecter off.
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I second that.
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That Craftsman Bolt Out set is the most usefull tool I bought in the last ten years. Fisrt I borrowed my friend's, then I bought the regular set (strong but wide), the impact set (3/8" drive) and the power bit set (stick it in a screw gun or turn it with a 1/4" socket). They only come with a ONE YEAR warrranty, not the lifetime one. Save your receipt, the impact and the power bits can break, I just got back from Sears tonight, they replaced two that I broke.