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Everything posted by nipper
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http://uk.cars.yahoo.com/car-reviews/car-and-driving/subaru-forester-range-1003544.html As far as turbocharged petrol Forester models are concerned (theres still no diesel), Subaru have dumped the 2.0 XT model but uprated its more recently introduced 2.5-litre XT counterpart, giving it an extra 19 PS, raising power to 230 PS and reducing the 0-60 mph time to 5.7 seconds for the manual. no such thing nipper
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Thats what i would bet too. WHen we tow here, we tend to tow farther and have steeper climbs on average. DOnt kid yourself, towing regularly does put a lot of stress on a vehical, and in general shortens the engines life. We hold on to our cars much longer, and put a lot more miles on them then the Brits, or for that matter most of europe. Lowering the numbers means a longer lasting vehical. nipper
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no no no no no. Tranny temp light gives out tranny trouble codes.Check Engine Light gives out engine codes. One doe not give out the others codes. What you have is NOT a tranny issue, its a drivability issue where something is way out of wack and the goes to limp mode. the TPS is not one of those thatwill do that. WHat code are you getting from the trannt light. I have a feeling what your doin g has no root in reality when it comes into your probelm. Lest start over MOdesl Engine Year Milleage ANy major work done of latee Any idiot lights on Whats your gas mileage. WHat is THE CODE you are getting in raw blinks, and let us interperit it. nipper
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This is how mine went: One morning on my x'rss country trip, in Iowa started the car one morning, heard the knock but it went away. Dorve the car to portland/seattle/San Fran (no noise i could hear). In fact i thought the car was running really well at the last fill up. Started climbing the pass out of sacramneto, got about 30 miles up, the car downshifted, at about 4800 rpm it was all over. One big bang, and lots of smoke. SInce you have noise, loud noise, you are pretty far along. Dont drive it hard, make sure AAA is paid up. nipper
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clutch issue
nipper replied to awdbiped's topic in 1990 to Present Legacy, Impreza, Outback, Forester, Baja, WRX&WrxSTI, SVX
Sudden occurance is a mechanical failure, as a slave or master cylinder will be better when cold, worse when hot, or some other weirdness. You may have llost a clip that retains the throw out bearing, so its new clutch time. nipper -
There is not timing belt, its a timing chain. Therefor you only have the main seal to worry about, and the timing pan gasket. Turbos always have shorter lives then n/a engine. The turbo may be simple, but when it goes, it costs big bucks. A N/A piston engine, especially a subaru should pile on miles like any other subaru engine. Again its an oppsed piston engine, so a lot of forces cancel out. The mmore moving parts is just a silly argument, if that was true, no one would by anything. NOrmally turbo engines have a shorter life then their n/a counterparts, but i dont think thats true for subarus. nipper
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Actually the resistance to flow is what causes the pressure, the pump is just the medium to move the oil. The Main and connecting rod bearings play a biigger part in oil pressure then the pump does, unless the pump clearances are bad or your leaking al over the ground. If the bearings have too big a clearance, you will have low or no oil pressure. Did you reseal the pump during the TB change. You cantake the pressure off of any galley plug. Quick and dirty check would be a mechanical gauge threaded ito the oil pressure switch. I dont ever recall anyone having a problem with the pump reseating itself. It is possible that the pump is tired if the car has over 150,000 miles, but usually i tell people to replace the pump on the 2.2 and 2.5 as they get near 200,000 miles for insurance. Putting the gauge on almost any oil galley will give you the same pressure as at the pump, the only difference wil be a slight lag for the gauge to presurize. What brand of filter are you using? nipper nipper
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Let me take a few gueses before we hijack the thread. If there is no compression the starter motor will spin really fast, and sound completly differnt. So if he has poor sealing/beant valves or a broken timing belt it will sound differnt. Now if anyone here has ever head a flywheel with borken chewed up teeth, it really is unmistakable. The grinding of the gear or the spinning of an unloaded starter is very unique. If the gear is chewed up and barely making contatc, sometimes the vibratcion of the starter will be enough to slightly turn the flywheel to a good tooth. The tooth isnt broken per se, just badly worn. A visual inspection can be done , but its a tooth by tooth operation. The noise itself is all one needs to hear. It doesnt matter if its a bad starter drive or solenoid, if its bad ehough to grind, then the teeth are damaged. You can replace the starter and see if that helps. Sometimes thats enough. What can cause this? A hairline crack in the flywheel, more likely a bad starter drive. The Spring in the drive can be broken or weak, and allow the drive to creep onto the flywheel, or retract very late. You wont here this happen most of the time, and even when you can, it is usually associated with an old car noise. The over running clutch in the drive can be bad, the solenoid can be sticking, the starter motor bushings can be worn. No matter what the condition of the flywheel, the starter wilhave to be replaced. Its very rare on suabaru that this just happens, more common on GM and Fords where it may not be the starters fault, and even then rare on a fwd car. nipper