Jump to content
Ultimate Subaru Message Board

cookie

Members
  • Posts

    3059
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Posts posted by cookie

  1. this won't help but a lot of us have done that. In the late 60s I had a 442 Olds I really could not afford gas for. We used to shift it into neutral on hills and I think everybody who drove it hit reverse a time or two. The engine would lock up and the car would go into a spin. As soon as you calmed down you could hold it to the floor and after a few churns it would start up and motor on. Still ran fine when sold a few years later.

    Sorry to hear about your tranny. by the way I've also seen two manuals killed by catching reverse. My girl friend blew gears in the road from my Volvo and my friend Rick killed his 66 Chevy. His locked up and tore the engine off the mounts so he took the plates and left.

  2. And a lot of torque bind at that age gets fixed by a fluid change a perhaps limited slip additive. If it were mine I'd change the head gaskets and fluids and drive the heck out of it. I couught mine at about 80,000 miles and did major work, seals, clutch, head gaskets... For the last two years I've changed the oil. I have 132,000 on the sucker now and it runs far better than when I bought it. I expect to sell at 200, 250,000.

  3. those suckers even corrode on here in CA. I block it up solidly and have used my six pound sledge on some. I've also had good luck with a large piece of 4x4 about 4 feet long. I hate when easterners bring thier rusty cars here for major maintence beofr3e driving home. At least on one Subaru we just had to fix a wiper, but the engine blew on that one.

  4. If it is a tranny with another problem they will break one up. The real problem in wrecking yards is they often know nothing about a car. If you had a friend that ,say, blew third gear, you might be able to get a deal on a known good extension. Sometimes a Subaru place will take one out for another problem and sell you a good extension, they know extensions are valuable and would save them.

  5. assumeing nothing else is wrong with the car I'd do the rebuild. If you were to shiop around I bet you could get a reliable job done for $800 up there, it might take a drive to do it though.

    Check for Richie Rich on this board (Subaru mechanic) and see if he can reccomend a place near you. You might have to pm him.

  6. I'm not sure of Subaru production dates, but often about 50% of a given year car may be produced the prior year. This would make it even tricker to see when a gasket released in 03 hit the production line. they are going to use up currnet stocks before the new ones are installed after all, and the engines are usually built before the cars, sometimes up to a year. Look at American production of the phase 2. The Japanese lines got it a year before the American lines.

    When we shipped Toyota stuff to Fremont for assembly the dates on the containers for powertain stuff were often several months behind.

×
×
  • Create New...