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Everything posted by 2X2KOB
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Remove each wheel and visually inspect the brakes first. Look for consistency in pad thickness, and anything else that might look dodgy. Likr ctoth said, lubrication on the sliders is important. It might just be a characteristic of the new pads. I've seen plenty of Volvos with good brakes that squeak, Subarus, not so much.
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I don't know about the secret Subaru undercoating compound, but I would like to say that if you are going to spray something over existing rust, take steps to get rid of absolutely all the rust that is there first. Spraying stuff on top of rust won't stop it, it'll just hide it while it eats holes in your car. This would seem to be the responsibility of whoever did the repair, and don't let them spray over rust either.
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1) removed wheels 2) cleaned off mud & snow 3) re-balanced wheels (on a spin balancer I presume) Between steps 2 & 3, whoever did the balancing would have been able to tell if the clean wheels were out of balance. Unless, of course, they knocked off all the existing weights at the same time they cleaned the wheels. In any case, spraying off the wheels at the carwash should be sufficient to eliminate vibration, if the wheels are in balance.
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The engine computer monitors the voltage output of a second oxygen sensor that is installed behind the catalytic convertor, which measures the oxygen content of the exhaust gas stream and therefore the efficiency of the catalytic convertor. That's the plan, anyway. There's some belief that, on this specific car, the computer's parameters are set to be too sensitive which results in frequent setting of the check engine light with the P0420 code. When I had the same problem (at 150k) a new oxgen sensor fixed it. You might have a bad cat, but a new sensor is a lot cheaper. If you can turn a wrench and splice wires, you can try a $70 generic replacement first.
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Tach pointer
2X2KOB replied to cody1746's topic in 1990 to Present Legacy, Impreza, Outback, Forester, Baja, WRX&WrxSTI, SVX
Some of the model airplane hobby shops sell a special thick type of super glue with some sort of filler in it. That might work. Clean it real good first with lacquer thinner or alcohol.