
Jenn
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About Jenn
- Birthday 01/02/1977
Profile Information
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Location
Florissant
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Vehicles
'95 Outback wagon
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Here is what I have learned: There is nothing but the inside of the outside metal behind my fuse box. If you take off the rubber guard and touch the coil on top the engine while the key is on it will light up your life. My dad unscrewed the very bottom of the dash (the part above your shins) and found what he thinks ( ) may be the relay. It had the right combo of wires going in. We used the voltage/ohm tester everywhere we could and found that the pump is getting power and in the right sequences. My dad's diagnosis is that the car doesn't realize that the pump isn't working and everything is fine except that the pump isn't pumping. My other half is going to head down to the salvage yard tomorrow and grab a pump, a relay, and whatever else we may be able to use...I love the salvage yard. You bring your tools and grab a wheelbarrow and take what you need for highly reduced prices. Redneck shopping at it's finest!
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The unplugged single prong connectors under my dash were BOTH green; now I am confused... A co-woker has loaned me a voltage tester (ohm meter?) and I am going to play with that tonight and see what I can learn. At this point I hope it is the fuel pump. I know and understand how to swap parts, electrical, I am clueless. Now when I connected that under the dash green connector my boyfriend turned the key on and I laid with my ear over the pump and heard nothing. But that doesn't clarify anything for me. Pump or electrical? I think some C-4 would solve the whole thing! But I'll let you know what I find out with the tester. Jenn
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Thanks, I appreciate the offer and I may take you up on it if I can't get the old girl fixed. I hooked it up to a diagnostic last night and other than telling me that the check engine light was on (DUH!) it said "no codes" which I don't understand. Obviously something is wrong, I thought for sure it would be able to tell me...sigh.
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Ok you wizards of subaru...I need help (again!) I replaced the ECU and it was fine for 5 days and then it died and hasn't started since. My father in law poured some gas into the intake and it started immediately and ran till that gas was gone and died again. I have read up on several threads here but nothing has worked so far. How do I find the fuel pump relay and or any fuses involved in the process? I tried the "connect the single prong green connector and listen for the pump to come on" idea and got nothing; but my father (mechanic) said that is not necessarily indicitive of a bad fuel pump it could still be electrical. I need some help in a big way. Anybody live near me and feel like lending a brain or a hand this weekend or soon? Are there any other ideas out there? I need my car.
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Unless your engine set-up is drastically different from mine your shouldn't need to do that...(I am very new to this site so take that into consideration with all my advice) When I changed mine out just last thursday, I stood on the passenger side of the car right up by the windshield and leaned in. It was right there under the wires after I took the air intake off and removed three small hoses. I am pretty sure I couldn't have reached it from underneath if I tried but there is 2 years difference between our models. *Shrug*
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8/05. So? Point is I have a dead car and am trying to fix it and the answer to this would help me out a lot. I have tried several things I have read here and so far nothing has worked. (No fault of anybody here though) I cannot find the pump relay and/or fuses so I am stuck. I can't even find out if the fuel pump is actually dead.