CNY_Dave
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Everything posted by CNY_Dave
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I would move the tires around to make sure it's not that... wheel bearings hum but usually the noise does not vary during the wheels revolution. Mind you, they can make all kinds of noise and do odd things, but usually not quite what you described, more of a hum that builds in volume and frequency the faster you go. Dave
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I've been dodging fixing an emissions code, P1443. Dove into it today, research showed it was most likely the drain valve, and if you connect the green connector under the dash, all solenoids and the fans are supposed to cycle. Was getting power, it didn't cycle, I managed to get it apart and the round slider was stuck in the bore. Wasn't rust, the plastic in the bore had swelled a bit. Poked around, found the hex part of an old clutch pushrod from a '67 GTO I had years back was a tight fit in the loose part of the bore. Chucked it in the drill press, bored the bore just a skosh, it's like new! Dave
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Manual says within one-quarter inch in circumference, which you can measure with a piece of string or a flexible tape measure. You could run radically different types of tires as long as the rolling circumference matched the AWD would be happy- but what would happen hitting the gas or brake when it was slick out, who knows. Now if you are just out of spec and have two tall tires the same size and two short tires the same size, you can put a tall and a short in front, and a tall and a short in the rear, probably best to have tall's diagonally opposite... I'm pretty sure if they were only a little out of spec nothing weird would happen as far as handling goes, and maybe even the rear limited-slip would be happy. Maybe. But, if not poor/desperate and you want it to last as long as possible, make 'em match. Dave
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A few '01s and '02s seem to have the early chain tensioner failure, haven't seen that reported on an '03 yet, very few re[ported head gasket problems, it has a regular 4EAT if it's the LL bean, the VDC model has the VDT trans with the center diff, 44/55 power split, and traction control. They make great highway cars as they are geared a bit higher than the 4 cyl outbacks, and it'll pull 120mph stock. 100, 110 are very easy to hit, those last 10mph take a bit of distance. Bought mine with 55K 3 years ago, just under 170 on mine now. I replaced a front wheel bearing, and the oil cooler coolant pipe under the engine is a bit rusty. Dave
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That last one is the big question- you would certainly not put the pressurized feed through the trans cooler, it's far too small and not built to withstand internal pressure. So, you'd need a circulation pump. I would suggest using the water-oil cooler from an H6, keep the oil where it belongs, bring the water to the oil. In the winter I think there is a huge advantage in having it as an oil-warmer, as well. Dave