
Patrickjd9
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Location
Maryland, USA
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Engineer
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Biography
Second Subaru, 2015 Legacy.
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Vehicles
2015 Legacy, had 2004 Legacy Wagon
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I don't own a Forester, but am considering a new or newer used Subaru. The Forester has several things about it that would make it more susceptible to crosswinds than a Toyota Sienna. They are pretty much the ones you mention, lighter weight, almost straight up and down sides in a tall vehicle, and narrower width. I know nothing about the OE tires, escept for a couple of negative comments on the subaruforester.org forum. My expectations of OE tires are pretty low, though. Hope this bump gets a comment or two from actual Forester owners.
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I'm a former Subaru owner (04 Legacy wagon, auto), and considering replacing my 7 passenger family hauler with a manual transmission Forester. The Legacy had an unfortunate meeting with a bus in downtown DC. While it was repaired, it never quite ran right again. Reliability was just fair even before the crash, but it had 118K of stoplight-to-stoplight city driving when we traded it last year. If it ever really existed, my need for a large people hauler has just about passed. I drove manual shift cars for almost 25 years before my current large box, and miss it a lot. I'm normally a new car buyer, keeping 125-150K miles, but I'd like to reduce costs with a child entering college. Willing to spend up to $15K on the Forester, though would buy a somewhat older one in good condition with no more than 70K miles. Want it new enough to have side airbags, including side curtain, and ABS. A few questions: 1. Is there any reason to pick one '11 or later with the new engine? 2. I've only driven the automatic Forester, how is the manual to drive? My previous experience is with Corollas and a Ford Focus. 3. What I see on the used market is base models, which I'm willing to buy. Are higher trim models available with the manual? 4. Will the Forester be more reliable than the 04 Legacy? The Forester would get mostly highway driving. Hope this string of questions isn't a bit much. Thanks in advance!
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17 mpg city, 22-24 mpg highway:eek: 04 Legacy Wagon, dual sunroofs 2.5 L, non-turbo, 98000 miles Automatic Transmission 5W-30 Valvoline engine, original diff oil, Castrol multi-brand Import ATF. No mods 205/55 R16 BF Goodrich Comp T/A (worn - New Michelins or Bridgestones within a few weeks) No Mods Heavily city driving/short trip. Wife is regular driver, I can do 1 or 2 mpg better.
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1980 Toyota Tercel. thoughts??
Patrickjd9 replied to Subaru_dude's topic in Non Soob Cars and Bikes Discussion
I owned an 82 Tercel with 4 speed manual, bought new. Very reliable for the 100K miles I kept it. Master cylinder, heater blower motor, and front wheel bearings are only failures I can recall. Idler pulley problem was due to dealer install screwup on A/C. 36 mpg is entirely possible, 40 mpg is unrealistic due to the high rpm on the highway. I only got there when limited to steady 55 mph for some reason. I eventually tired of the high rpm drone at 65 mph or more. Upside is that it can get 29-30 mpg in bumper to bumper city traffic. -
No odd noises, just the steering feel. Car has never had an alignment. OE tires wore evenly right to replacement at 56K miles--rotated every 15K miles. 78K miles doesn't seem like a lot for struts, though the car has been heavily city-driven. I picked up the tire wear issue last time I changed the oil. Perhaps I'll try to get a wheel alignment when I'm off on Friday.
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I drove my wife's 04 Legacy wagon on a rare highway trip (250 miles RT) yesterday and had to keep the speed down to 70 mph or less because it was so quease-inducing. An unpleasant ride in what has been a pleasant car to drive (bought new). The car has a 2.5 liter non-turbo, automatic, and 78K mostly stoplight-to-stoplight city miles in and out of Washington, DC. The car has had its power steering pump replaced recently. It still turns left easier compared to turning right, but less so than before. I tried the fender bounce test on the front struts this morning. The driver's side presses down and settles quickly, but with a lot of resistance. The passenger's side has less resistance, and seems to let the other side twist a bit before settling. Neither is your classic bouncy worn strut feeling. The front passenger-side tire is also wearing a bit unevenly. I'm inclined to replace the front struts on general principle, but suspect that it really needs some actual diagnosis. Any ideas to be looking at?