
ccrinc
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Everything posted by ccrinc
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You gave a car with 155 hp a triple whammy: full load, high temps and the AC going, all while doing 100mph. Oh, and mountains. Of course, it's going to stress it. What you experienced is normal. I do not recommend trying to run up mountains with the AC on anyway: it's always a loss of power and hard on the engine and cooling system. Pressure check the cooling system and do an oil change. If it's running ok otherwise, you should be good. Emily
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On the EZ30 engine, the water pump is inside the front metal timing cover. They are nearly indestructible, are run by the crankshaft and cannot leak outside the engine unless the front and rear timing covers come unsealed. Look to something outside of the engine itself. Hoses, connectors, etc. There are a bunch of them that could be leaking, and only under pressure. Emily
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I have to disagree with the above opinions. Once a rod bearing starts to go, it will only continue until, ultimately, you will throw a rod and/or the engine wlll seize completely. . Also, that bearing material is circulating throughout your entire engine, doing its best to clog other oil passages (like to the cams). This is not an "if", it's a "when". The bearing is shedding material and it won't stop until it disintegrates completely. Any mechanic who tell you "it's not a big deal" is a complete idiot or someone who just didn't want to address the problem. The vast majority of the engines we build are due to being run low on oil or lack of oil changes and therefore, compromised rod and/or main bearings. This is NOT a minor issue. It is the death knell of the engine. Period. ps: Don't even attempt a 600 mile trip with a bad rod bearing. It will end in tears. Emily
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On this engine, it's not the chains themselves that go bad: it's the tensioners due to lack of regular oil changes. They are lubricated by the engine oil and if they fail, the engine is toast. I bought one with a known overheat issue for more than this (but gorgeous otherwise), we rebuilt the engine and I drove it for years until 2 spine surgeries made it hard for me to get into it. Honestly, at $2750, you can hardly go wrong. Emily
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Dead Forester
ccrinc replied to Corpy's topic in 1990 to Present Legacy, Impreza, Outback, Forester, Baja, WRX&WrxSTI, SVX
First, NDC outsourced their bearings to China (OEM to Subaru)...we quit buying them. Then ACL did, except for their race bearings, which are unobtainium. We refused to use King bearings years ago, but their quality has improved exponentially, especially on their race bearings, so that's what we use now. Still, 2005 had some really quirky issues over even later years. Years of change always do that. Emily -
They're all over ebay. Also, NPR is the co. which makes them for Subaru. We've always used them and they are top quality. OTOH, Mahle brand make our head builder just go nuts: they're impossible to work with. However, with your description, I'd just re-use them. Put them back in the cylinders they were in originally. Emily
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Dead Forester
ccrinc replied to Corpy's topic in 1990 to Present Legacy, Impreza, Outback, Forester, Baja, WRX&WrxSTI, SVX
You said you've had pinging problems for a long time. According to my information, you should have been able to run regular unleaded with no problems. Since you couldn't, that's pointing toward air/fuel mixture in some way. Knock sensor, MAF/MAP, etc. If it's as bad as you say, I'm going out on (yet another) limb here and thinking you have a cracked ring landing on a piston. As for testing, compression is always a good one, but a leak down test will better tell you WHERE the problem is coming from, unless you have obviously bad compression in one or more cylinders. I don't know why, but 2005 Subarus just had some really oddball issues. There is another thing that comes to mind: make sure all your grounding straps are secure. See your owners manual or a repair manual: there are several. Emily -
I have an AWD 2009 Forester and we also have 2 4x trucks. We would NEVER run a truck in 4x on the highway unless we needed to get through some heavy snow. All my Subarus have done just great in any depth of snow and you'll even see Subarus pulling 4x vehicles out of the road-side ditches because idiots and 4WD just don't mix. On ice, nothing will help you, except possibly special "ice" tires. But the Subaru AWD system still performs better in icy conditions than any 4WD. Also, AWD performs like a boss on curvy mountain roads, sure-footed and responsive. I've done enough "canyon runs" to really appreciate the Subaru driveline. Towing capacity on a Forester is 1000 lbs without trailer brakes. 2400 with trailer brakes according to cars101.com. Emily