Jump to content
Ultimate Subaru Message Board

Recommended Posts

Hello All,


I'm experiencing some noise from my manual transmission (i think) during
the recent cold snap in northern Vermont. The car is a 09' with 100,000
miles on it.The noise only happens when I'm on the throttle and loading
the engine, stops completely as soon as I lift off the gas.

This only happens when it is <5°F, this morning it was -12°F and it
was very loud. I would describe the noise as a knocking or clacking.
There are also two levels to the sound. Under light throttle I have one
noise, and under hard throttle I have a different, louder, worse
sounding noise.

I get the noise even after letting the engine warm up completely, which
leads me to believe the noise is in the gear box, as this does not warm
up while idling. Also, the noise does go away after 10-15 minutes of
driving. It seems to happen in all gears and does not happen when I rev
the engine in neutral. From the driver seat, the noise seems to come
from directly below the center console, maybe a bit in front of the
shifter.

I have replaced the transmission fluid, maybe 15,000 miles ago with Subaru extra-s fluid.

Has any one else experienced these symptoms?
       
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for the response!

 

Seems to match engine speed more than road speed, so it could be something related to the input shaft of the transmission. The most noise seems to be between 1500 and 3000 rpms. It might even stop at higher rpms above 3000. Very dependent on engine load. If I accelerate slowly, it doens't seems as bad as if I work the engine.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Fluid is filled to the correct level?

Try to avoid heavy acceleration when the trans is cold and the fluid isn't yet working around as well as it should be.

 

The trans will warm up slightly while at idle, just not as quickly as by driving it. As long as the input shaft is spinning there will be friction between the shaft, gears, and fluid that will cause it to warm up some. The engine block also transfers some heat to the trans via the bell-housing, and there is an exhaust pipe that runs right by the trans which gets warm pretty quick, and the radiant heat from that will warm the side of the trans.

 

Clicking/knocking that is engine speed dependent is often the main input shaft bearing. Those are a common failure on older models, but they usually make it to at least 150k before having any problems. The only ones I've heard of failing sooner than that are in cars that are poorly maintained or have had contamination (such as water) of the gear oil. Haven't really heard of that being an issue on the newer stuff (2005 +) and certainly not at such a low mileage.

 

My guess would be that its just damn cold! Try to let it warm up a bit more before you drive away , and try to keep your foot out of it until everything has had a chance to get warmed up.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

Please sign in to comment

You will be able to leave a comment after signing in



Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...