808Legacy Posted July 5, 2013 Share Posted July 5, 2013 First, let me cut to the chase: http://youtu.be/Ah1GwaPY_Ds Recently got a great deal on a 98 Outback. Manual, 172k, yeah, yet seems solid to me, good power up hills, shifts fluidly. yet... it was rather low on oil when I got it last week, so I added 2 quarts 10w-30 (1reg, 1 blend), and then today, 1 synth. It's not leaking anywhere, btw. I've read other threads about similar clicks and knocks. This one isn't very loud, but my more knowledgable friend insists that it could be an issue and that I ought to change oil with Lucas and some 60 weight racing oil. I realize this could be a variety of issues and even a video isn't the same as seeing it in person. Seems to be coming from drivers side middle area. He thought previous lack of oil might have done some metal damage, like in piston or valve(s). Beyond my expertise, for sure. The knock is so subtle, I wasn't super worried about it (the way Subarus sound), yet my friend says I need to deal with it ASAP. Any takers? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
808Legacy Posted July 5, 2013 Author Share Posted July 5, 2013 Hope my video link shows up, I can't see it on my iPhone, but might just be my connection. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
808Legacy Posted July 5, 2013 Author Share Posted July 5, 2013 http://youtu.be/Ah1GwaPY_Ds Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
808Legacy Posted July 5, 2013 Author Share Posted July 5, 2013 (edited) This was an accidental repost of the video because it didn't appear on my iPhone. Edited July 9, 2013 by 808Legacy 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
idosubaru Posted July 5, 2013 Share Posted July 5, 2013 video is showing up in your thread. i can't view it tonight though. the lucas and racing additives are a waste of time and will not help. this particular Subaru engine (not all, just this one) is prone to piston slap. if the tapping is louder at start up and diminshes as it warms up that's classic piston slap and is benign. fuel injectors can click. mechanics stethoscope should narrow that down, place on each injector and compare. the timing belt tensioners get old and can slap - creating a noise hard to distinguish from engine knock even to a mechanic because it slaps metal on metal. generally gets worse under load...accelerating, up hill, etc. any engine run low on oil will eventually eat bearings, usually rod bearings in this motor. if it was 2 quarts low when you got it, who knows how low it's been in the past. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
808Legacy Posted July 5, 2013 Author Share Posted July 5, 2013 (edited) This doesn't get worse or louder under load. I'll listen closely when I drive it up hill next, but pretty sure it doesn't. It doesn't seem to diminish as it warms up, does seem to be intermittent, or at least I didn't hear it much when my friend pulled it in just a minute ago. Restarted and it's there. But subtle. I just listened with a piece of garden hose as a makeshift stethoscope. Def. seems to be coming from medial (to borrow another medical term) engine block, able to hear more from driver's side (but more obstructions on pass. side). Edited July 5, 2013 by 808Legacy 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fairtax4me Posted July 5, 2013 Share Posted July 5, 2013 Timing belt tensioner is on the drivers side. You can see it by removing the timing cover on the drivers side and looking in from the side with a flashlight. The tensioner should be still, or have very little movement. If it looks like its jumping around it is damaged and needs to be replaced. You should also check the crankshaft pulley for signs of looseness or wobbling around. The bolt in the center of the pulley can sometimes work loose and cause the crankshaft pulley to wobble around and cause a knocking type of noise. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikaleda Posted July 5, 2013 Share Posted July 5, 2013 What I woul like to know is why you mixed synthetic and conventional oil, I always thought that was a no go. +1 on tensioner easy enough to check Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
808Legacy Posted July 5, 2013 Author Share Posted July 5, 2013 Because that's what I had on hand. Same weight. Mixing reg. & synthetic is fine. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
john in KY Posted July 5, 2013 Share Posted July 5, 2013 Don't use the 60wt. My money is also on the tensioner. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
efseiler Posted July 6, 2013 Share Posted July 6, 2013 My Dad's Subaru makes a 'knocking' sound just like that and I think he's put like 50,000 miles on it...doesn't seem to be serious. I don't think different oil will make any difference. It's something mechanical like those guys said. --Damien Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
efseiler Posted July 6, 2013 Share Posted July 6, 2013 It does seem like kind of a loud knocking, tho. :-/ Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
808Legacy Posted July 7, 2013 Author Share Posted July 7, 2013 Ok, went with my savant mechanic friend's suggestion and added the Lucas oil stabilizer (about 2 qts), 2 qts Lucas 70 wt racing oil, and topped it off with 15w40. No more knock! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
uniberp Posted July 7, 2013 Share Posted July 7, 2013 Ok, went with my savant mechanic friend's suggestion and added the Lucas oil stabilizer (about 2 qts), 2 qts Lucas 70 wt racing oil, and topped it off with 15w40. No more knock! If thicker oil fixed it, it's rod knock. Matter of time. Could be a month, could be 2 years. You only risk ruining the core. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rooster2 Posted July 7, 2013 Share Posted July 7, 2013 If thicker oil fixed it, it's rod knock. Matter of time. Could be a month, could be 2 years. You only risk ruining the core. Agree, if thicker oil quiets the motor, then it is rod knock. Guess you could replace the rod bearings, but with 177K miles on the motor, it would be better to replace with a known good motor. My 98 OBW lives happily with a 95, 2.2 motor. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
auto2 Posted July 8, 2013 Share Posted July 8, 2013 rod knock to me. piston slap is more of a double knock noise.knock-knock....knock kncok..... but real fast Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
WoodsWagon Posted July 8, 2013 Share Posted July 8, 2013 2qts of lucas is way to much. 1/2 quart at the most, rest regular oil. You're going to destroy the engine because it will not move enough oil through the bearings at cold start. It's like pumping molasses. It sounds like either piston slap or rod knock. Hard to tell with out revving it up and snapping the throttle shut and listening for the back-rattle of a dying rod bearing. With piston slap you can run normal oil and ignore it and it will run fine for the next 1OOk miles. My mom's 98 came with horrendous piston slap, and ran fine, got good mpg, and was problem free for the next 5 years. It sounded like a diesel in winter, and the piston slap didn't quiet down much when warmed up. Embarrassing, but it ran fine so whatever. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
johnceggleston Posted July 8, 2013 Share Posted July 8, 2013 (edited) info below is from Engine Diagnosis 101 not all of that link is noise related, but still a pretty good link. When your engine is cold, the aluminum piston is small in comparison to it'ssurrounding iron cylinder. Why? Because with heat, aluminum expandsroughly 5 times as much as iron. Therefore the rather hollow piston slapping noisewill be loudest first thing in the morning. After the engine warms up,the aluminum piston expands more than it's iron cylinder, reducing the excessive clearancebetween the piston and cylinder wall. So, the test is this: First thing in the morning, start the engine up and run it for 15 secondswhile you listen carefully and memorize the sound and it's intensity.Shut it down quickly, pull the spark plugs and put two squirts of motoroil into each cylinder. Reinstall the plugs, fire the engine up againand listen.If you have piston slap the noise will have been greatly reduced or eveneliminated…..for 15 or 20 seconds that is, and then your nightmarenoise will come back like a Marine Corps marching band coming toward youin the parade. Rod knocks are loudest at higher speeds (over 2500 RPM) Feathering the gaspedal may result in a distinctive back rattle between 2500 and 3500RPMs.Bad rod knocks may doubleknock if enough rod bearing material has been worn away allowing thepiston to whack the cylinder head in addition to the big end of theconnecting rod banging on the crankshaft rod journal. It will sound likea hard metallic knock (rod) with an alternating and somewhat muffledaluminum (piston) klock sound.Wrist pin knock in modern engines is very rare today but is a favorite for themisdiagnosticians. Determining which cylinder contains the noisy parts may be aided by shorting outthe plug wires one by one with a common low voltage test light. Now you won't get the bulb to light up but it is a convenient way to shortthe cylinders without getting zapped or damaging the ignition coil.Attachthe alligator clip to a convenient ground, away from fuel systemcomponents, and pierce the wire boots at the coil pack or distributorend of the wire.(Some guys will use straight pins stuck in the ankle of the wire boots in thedistributor. You know. The guys with tattoos and key rings stuck in theireyebrows. Then they touch a grounded jumper wire to each one.) If the noise is changed when the plug wire is shorted to ground, you can figurethat the problem is in the reciprocating bottom end parts. (piston,wrist pin, connecting rod or connecting rod bearing)The reason the sound changes is that when you short the cylinderplug wire you are stopping the combustion chamber explosions that areslamming the piston downward making the inside of the big end of theconnecting rod bang against it's connecting rod journal. Or in the caseof piston slap, no explosion changes how the piston is shoved hardsideways against the cylinder wall. If you get a change in the sound when you short a cylinder out it maybecome moot as to what the problem is because the oil pan and cylinderhead must be removed to correct the problem. [Generally speaking, anengine with damage to reciprocating parts (pistons, rings, connectingrods, wrist pins or rod bearings) and more than 70 thousand miles is notcost effective or risk free enough to attempt to repair. Replacing acrankshaft, for example while the rest of the engine has 70k perfectlymaintained miles on it is risky enough but whatever killed the crank hasscored the rings and packed the lifters with debris and smoked thepiston pin bosses etc.If the sound doesn't change, look at parts other than the reciprocatingones. In many cases of rod-knock or piston slap, more than one isbanging so even if you eliminate the noise from one rod the other onewill still be a-banging away with a different, more singular tone.Valve train noises generally are loudest up to 1500 rpms. Lifters arealso misdiagnosed commonly as the source of many noises when in realitythey are quite trouble free,sorta. Dirt contamination on a sludged engine is the number one cause oftrue lifter noises, low oil pressure is number two, . Whatever you do,don't put engine flush in a sludged engine! We call it "Instant rodknock" because of the way it overloads the oil filter to the point ofopening the filter bypass valve, flooding and destroying the enginebearings with mud. The only safe way to clean a sludged engine is toaccelerate the oil changes and let the detergent in the oil do thecleaning at a controlled rate. Like every 500 miles By the way, if you have low oil pressure, don't bother putzing around with the valvetrain because the damage you find will be the result of low oil pressureand will return after you spend a bunch of money on valve train parts.Over nineteen engines out of twenty that we tear down with low oil pressuredo NOT have bad oil pumps but have worn out bearings and journals soquit with the wishful thinking about just putting a pump in it.Think about it, usually, an oil pump is two dumb ol' iron gears spinningaround immersed completely in oil. EVERYTHING else in the engine has atougher time of it than the oil pump. Edited July 8, 2013 by johnceggleston Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
efseiler Posted July 8, 2013 Share Posted July 8, 2013 Yeah that's a lot of Lucas...I usually only put a few ounces in my 2.2L engine. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
808Legacy Posted July 9, 2013 Author Share Posted July 9, 2013 2qts of lucas is way to much. 1/2 quart at the most, rest regular oil. You're going to destroy the engine because it will not move enough oil through the bearings at cold start. It's like pumping molasses. It sounds like either piston slap or rod knock. Hard to tell with out revving it up and snapping the throttle shut and listening for the back-rattle of a dying rod bearing. With piston slap you can run normal oil and ignore it and it will run fine for the next 1OOk miles. My mom's 98 came with horrendous piston slap, and ran fine, got good mpg, and was problem free for the next 5 years. It sounded like a diesel in winter, and the piston slap didn't quiet down much when warmed up. Embarrassing, but it ran fine so whatever. So, I am in Hawaii, temp. never gets lower than 70-75 deg., so there is no "cold" cold start (unless I spent the night on Haleakala (10,000ft) or lived way upcountry above 5000ft. Thick oil turns lighter fast out here. I am very apprecitative of everyone's input here; I am going to try the cylinder experiment in the morning. Seems like the knock is now much lower in volume and very intermittent, btw. I'll post another video soon. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
808Legacy Posted July 9, 2013 Author Share Posted July 9, 2013 http://youtu.be/EC-mTfcxdSg Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
heartless Posted July 9, 2013 Share Posted July 9, 2013 2qts of lucas is way to much. 1/2 quart at the most, rest regular oil. You're going to destroy the engine because it will not move enough oil through the bearings at cold start. It's like pumping molasses. This x 2! initial (cold) startup is the most important time for oil distribution - thick oil does not distribute well right away, especially thru small oil passages - which these engines have. "Cold" startup has little to do with ambient temperature - more to do with the fact that the car has been sitting, and oil has drained away from areas higher up in the engine. Getting oil to those areas quickly is critical on initial start. You may "think" you have solved the mystery knock, but in reality, you are probably causing more damage. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ivans imports Posted July 9, 2013 Share Posted July 9, 2013 Piston slap is running to smooth for bad rod take out #4 #2 pistons knurll them and put them back in sound will be gone. But realy start with pulling the oil fillter and dumping it out into a pan tant you can see if any meatal or berring materail in the oil. Have heard worse piston slap than that always #2/4 that slap have you treid pulling the wire of on that cly and see if noise stops when not firing ?also a oil preshure check helps min 10 psi hot at idle. And oil light should go out in under 1 second cold start Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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