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Everything posted by nipper
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In all honesty i really dont see the advntage to synthetic. People forget that synthetis oil still has a filter that needs to be changed at mfg required intervals. If you do the math over the lifetime of the car, dino oil is cheaper then over the lifetime of the car, and its been doing well for almost a 100 years. We can sit here and do the discussions and arguments all you want. Unless you have extreem driving conditions or weather, stick with whatever you feel comfortable with. if you dont do your own oil changes, its hard to find someone to just change a filter. nipper
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I've always had a dirt driveway to work on. I use a padded plastic mat to lie on. Not only is it comfy, but its a great thermal barrier. Another trick is to lay down a tarp. if you drop anything you can find it on a blue tarp alot easier then a driveway that loves to eat small parts. nipper
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Look at it this way. If you need a new cat, odds are you should replace the front o2 sensor anyway. Since the front sensor is cheaper then the cat, replace it with a GENUINE SUBARU O2 sensor and see what happens. The radiator should have been cleaned out when they did the HG for that price, shame on them if they didnt do it. If you have no complaints about it running hot dont worry about that. All subarus it seems have that smell to some degree. The brand new outback i rented had it also, and the service writer said they couldnt find it. What the heck is a backpressure transducer valve. nipper
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its not a myth, your just not inderstanding it. Going from Dyno to synthetic may make the gaskets leak for a very short period of time, but it usually goes away. Seals on the other hand, it just means that they are going to leak sooner, but were going to anyway. Synthetic oil has a smaller molcule and will find place to travel, but as dirt get in these places, the leak will stop. On the other hand, switching from synthetic to dino oil may cause leaks. Now if you switch to or from synthetic and the car leaks, it means it was going to leak eventually anyway. Switching back its not uncomon to have leaks, but then again it just means you were going to have them anyway. Now the question is do you want to leak 1.50 a qt oil or 5.00 a qt oil. nipper
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The cruise control is all f*****d up as far as im concerned. There are times when a gentle squeeze of the throttle is enough, yet subaru chose a program that floors the car instead. This in large part had something to do with mine throwing a rod Now when i use the cruise on rolling hills, i use my foot to squeeze the throttle over the hill to avoid that forced massive downshift. nipper
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Early GM LU trannies were a mess. At first they didnt even have a way of turning them off, which made the car a dog. Early failure was common, and the fix is what you described (dad had an olds and we had to do that too). Shift points are complicated. You rally need to see the HP/Torque curves to get a feel for when the trannnies shift and why. I just did a drive and payed attention to the cars shifting. Above 60mph (2500 rpm i think) Press the gas, the rpms and MPH increased at the same time. Below 2500 RPM (60) the car would downshift out of 4th into 3rd. It seems like below 2500 RPM your out of the power band of the car, so you could end up lugging the car staying in a higher gear. What you are blaming the LU TC for is, not the converters fault, but more a factor of the cars power band. nipper
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The sooby has an honest 4 speed transmission with a lock up torque converter. Putting it in drive three, you are stepping down a gear, not disconnecting the LU TC. (but it does unlock for the shift). Overriding the TCU for LU TC can cause more harm then good. You can be lugging the engine (i'm sure there is some logic to it that im not privey too). Also in actuality the engine give you faster throttle response and faster incre4ase in speed when it unlocks, to let the torque converter (which multiples torque at amost 3 to 1) do its job. A direct mechanical hook up may take a little more time for the engine to build revs. Go read up on how a TC works. If you want to feel it work, accelrtae moderatly and dont read the tach. Let your ears do the work. You will hear what sounds like a 1-1.5-2-2.5-3-3,5 shift That .5 is actually the TC unlocking to allow for the shift. It almost feels like a drop off in power (it is a bit) but it works well. This is part of the reason why transmissions are lasting longer, as they are being enginered to reduce shift shock instead of absorbing it. http://auto.howstuffworks.com/torque-converter.htm Also realize nothing in the drive train acts in a bubble. Everything interacts, so what you may think is actually an improvement can hurt something else (and murphies law at three times the cost). nipper
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I can read, but since they screwed up i would take it back. Now if you can do math, 2 hours of driving costing you 30.00 in gas means there is something majorly wrong with the car. Thats almost a tank of gas in 2 hours. It would also cost them 100 bucks of shop time to fix a return, and the mechanic that screwed it up would have to fix it (normally). the time comes off his books. See i can read and do math. Do whatever you want, have fun and good luck. nipper
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Now What??
nipper replied to 2000outback's topic in 1990 to Present Legacy, Impreza, Outback, Forester, Baja, WRX&WrxSTI, SVX
fakeout kits are bad in so many ways. o2 sensor is the heart of the fuel injection system. If it is not operating correctly you can suffer poor performance, poor mileage, and worse.. burn up a cat converter. nipper