
eseiler
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About eseiler
- Birthday 07/05/1973
Contact Methods
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MSN
efseiler@hotmail.com
Profile Information
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Location
St. Johnsbury
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Vehicles
1996 Legacy Outback
eseiler's Achievements

Advanced Member (3/11)
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Yeah, that happens, too...the CEL blinks about 10 or so times whenever its hesitates bad. I had a similar problem before and when I read the codes back then it said 'cylinder misfire'. Back then it turned out that a wire got a little loose on the plug. Alright, I'll check that... Thanks for the advice. --Damien
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I have an EJ22 engine which is now almost constantly misfiring. Especially prevalent going uphill or accelerating. I'm thinking wires and/or plugs. O2 sensor maybe? I recently had exhaust work done so I drove it for a while w/o proper backpressure. Additives don't seem to work and resetting the 'puter is to no avail. Any idears? --Damien
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Hi, I recently blew a fuse (shorted the cig lighter) but upon replacing the fuse (2nd from left, middle row beneath steering column on 96 OWB) the heated seats and mirror adjustment won't work. Cig lighter still won't work as well! All other fuses there seem to be fine. Also, I checked fuses under hood but they also are all fine. Any other places I could check? Thanks! Damien
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My parents have a 96 OBW with a EJ22 engine. I believe there is a hairline crack on the block (cloudy antifreeze, occasional bubbling in OF tank, high rate of oil consumption). I do not think that it is a HG issue. I was wondering if the product from Bar's (radiator additive) is effective in helping to seal the breach in the shortblock. The vehicle otherwise drives fine, only rarely overheats. Thanks for your input. Regards, Damien
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Apparently the problem is with the control valve which governs the piston pressure used to regulate applied pressure to that clutch pack. I was told that part (with the wire hanging off it) in the lower right-hand side of pic #4 of previous post needs replacing. I have some diagrams from Subaru outlining all the components and part numbers associated with the rear part of the transmission, if anybody wants a copy. You should be able to obtain them from a dealership. Cheers! Damien
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I have the same problem with my 96 OBW. Replacing the TCU solved the problem...but only temporarily. Apparently, there is a piston which governs the amount of pressure applied to the rear clutch pack. This in turn controls the amount of torque transferred to the rear differential. The problem is in the system which controls the piston pressure. The current nature of the malfunction (at least in my transmission) is that there seems to be a 'bias' to apply a constant pressure. Under normal operating conditions, the pressure varies constantly depending on many different factors (acceleration, velocity, crankshaft torque, throttle aperture, wheel slip, turn radius, etc.) The malfunction results in torque bind and also a loud 'clunking' noise when shifting from D to Park after a drive (upon sudden release of pressure applied to clutch pack). Eventually the clutch plates will wear down to nothing...but they are pretty tough...hardened steel. (The rear differential is supposed to be REALLY tough!) I'm hoping to get another 30K miles out of my transmission (currently at 190K miles). It is my belief that the problem is mostly electronic/electrical in nature. I would guess the job would be $1.50 in electronic/electrical parts, hundreds in labor to get at it! Could somebody explain how a solenoid could fail? --Damien
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I've spent enough time troubleshooting the problems with my 4EAT to be reasonably certain that electrical/electronic problems may very well be the matter. I'm going to go that route first before I consider an expensive shop repair. Can anyone tell me where the TCU is actually located? I know it's under the steering wheel somewhere...a picture or two of what it actually looks like would be helpful. Thanks! --Damien