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highway mileage on a 2.5 '97 outback wagon


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You should be able to pull almost 30 on the highway if it's an auto. We could get 29.5mpg with 3 people and their gear in our 1998 cruising cross country at 75mph.

 

This was a 98 Outback wagon with the DOHC 2.5l and 4eat. Middle of summer doing crosscountry trips across the midwest.

Edited by WoodsWagon
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I get better gas milage then that and it's kinda hilly here the way I go... with a mix of Highway/city I avg about 26 MPG with the AC on. The worst was 16 but that's when I did not have 5th gear and a few other stuff I had to tackle.

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My 97 GT auto wagon, with a 2.2 transplant, gets a consistant 21-22 around town.

 

Did a fuel filter, subaru plugs+wires, checked brakes for drag etc. did not get much mprovement, but I have read others having improvements in mileage.

 

The sons Legacy 4dr sedan, 2.2 auto consistantly gets 25 around town, 28-29 on the highway.

 

Go figure.

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I can't say how much but I had a improvement in gas mileage when I got new plug wires.. #3 was misfiring because the wire inside broke off so it would hesitate a lot.. What sucked was you know the rubber part around the tip of the plug wires? It got left in the motor somehow and was a pain in the rump roast to get out.. I had to use a coat hanger with a sharp point to stick it and pull it out.

 

I've got a 500 mile trip next month curious to see what I can get on a tank of gas.. I can do 310 here on a tank which is not bad.. better then my other Legacy.

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be sure to "throttle" your engine. I've seen 30MPG in my little Impy and about 38 out of my old GL wagon. I drove down to Trinidad on monday, and Cheyenne on tuesday.. ~26-30MPG round trip.. I throttle it at 70mph on cruse and kick it off on hills so it doesnt down-shift going up those hills - thats where you really kill your hwy miles. keeping the engine speed at around 2500 - 3k.. will help keep your mpg up.. any higher and you are putting more engine energy to keep the speed up there. 70mph is about what i cruse at..

 

sources: I hypermile! :headbang:

 

 

-Justin

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From my experience of owning one of these for 9 years....

 

About the best you're going to see out of the older 2.5 outbacks is 25mpg highway. If you're driving down a long stretch of flat interstate, maybe 26-27. The EPA hwy rating is 25 and that's what I get each time I do a fill-up and I do like 85% highway driving.

 

My car has NGK Laser Iridium plugs, NGK wires, NTK o2 sensors, I keep all my filters clean, and I actually even put in brand new fuel injectors. None of it has done much to improve mileage above that number. It's the nature of the beast, I guess.

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and I would really like to know how anybody is getting 30mpg in these things. I have a really relaxed driving style to the point where I piss people off taking off from red lights. Maybe I need to do a full tank down I-5 and see what happens.

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Last April when I went over Vail Pass and Eisenhower Tunnel in my 98 Outback and back for a total of 250 miles I got 32 mpg and that was running the speed limit with a automatic. Just about all the uphill driving is done in third gear just so that it doesn't jump back and forth from overdrive.

Edited by jp98
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and I would really like to know how anybody is getting 30mpg in these things. I have a really relaxed driving style to the point where I piss people off taking off from red lights. Maybe I need to do a full tank down I-5 and see what happens.

 

I got about that doing 60 MPH for a 600 mile trip I got about that high.. not every many people can do 60 for 624 miles.

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And to add.. Tire wear, Air pressure, alignment.. but thats just being nit-picky..

 

 

-Justin

 

Not really, everything is critical to getting top mileage. Big roof rack, having a moose strapped to the roof, etc drops it fast too.

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