maestro Posted November 15, 2016 Share Posted November 15, 2016 The other day i had an incident with my 2000 subaru outback that concerns me and have no idea what to make of it.The outback has the 4 cylinder engine and manual 5 speed. A Couple ofweeks ago i was making the 8 mile trip to work and while in city traffici noted the temperature gauge went hot. Like nearly to the top. I gotit to a road clear of traffic and stop lights, turned the heat on highand when possible let the car drift to get it to cool down some. Thisdid bring the temp down. I only had a couple of mile to get to work so ihopped on the interstate. While on the interstate the temperatureslowly crept up. When i got off the interstate i used the same drifttechniques to cool the engine to make the last mile or so to work. Imade it with no indication of over heating. I went into work. 12 hourslater i'm off and bring a jug of water to my car. I checked the coolantreserve and its at the proper level. I opened the radiator cap and thereis coolant there as well. I'm starting to wonder about head gaskets atthis point. I cranked the car and let it idle with the radiator cap off.My intention was to let it warm up and see if the thermostat openedthen look for air bubbles in the radiator or steam at the exhaust. Thetop radiator hose did slowly get hot so i assumed the thermostat wasworking. No steam at the tailpipe. I revved the engine a few times byhand under the hood to watch for bubbles in the radiator. Upon revving igot a couple of bubbles at first but not enough to convince me of headgasket failure. I thought maybe it was just a little air that had beentrapped in the system. The fans never turned on while idling but iturned the ac on and the both worked. The whole time during this testingthe car never got over its normal temperature range.Here is where my story gets interesting and the real reason i'm posting...While standing in front of the car revving the engine all of a suddenthe car lunges forward a few inches and bumps my leg then dies suddenly.It was as if someone dumped the clutch while in gear. Now i am absolutely sure thetransmission was in neutral. Not slightly in neutral position butabsolutely in neutral position. Before getting out of my car fromcranking it in the first place i had put in neutral with engine running,released the clutch and shook the shifter to ensure it was in theneutral position as i always do before getting out of a car with enginerunning. My parking brake was up and tight which is probably what savedme from getting injured.Needless to say this scared the you know what out of me. After icomposed myself walked from in front of the car to the driver door. Theni smelled a burning rubber or clutch type smell. I got in the car andchecked for neutral. The shifter was able to move freely side to sidebut felt as if it were positioned back towards the rear of the car abit. With clutch in i started the car. I released the clutch slowly andthe car behaved as if in high gear like 5th. I took the parking brakeoff and revved the engine and released the clutch slowly like trying totake off but the car moved forward and the engine tried to die againlike starting in 5th gear. Mind you I'm still in neutral position. Ithen pushed the clutch back in and move the shifter through all thegears. All the positions were tight and hard to get in and out of. Whilein first gear position i attempted to pull forward. The car did moveforward but it was not able to move smoothly. It was as if moving overlumps or like when you have a really loose universal joint on adriveshaft about to come out. Same results in reverse. I kept playingwithe shifter an clutch and after only about 30 seconds everythingstarted behaving normal. The shifter felt as if t had moved forward tothe correct position in the car and moved freely again. The smell wentaway and i could shift and move the car as normal. I replaced theradiator cap and drove to a nearby autoparts store without incident. Ilet the car idle in neutral and revved the engine occasionally for a fewminutes while there. No heating issues occurred and the transmissionbehaved correct. Since i was at the end of my work week i decided to goahead and risk the 100 mile trip to my real home. I have a place i staythat is close to work i stay at while in the middle of my work week thusthe short drive into work at the start of my shift.During my 100 mile trip i experienced no heating issues and thedrivetrain behaved properly. I'm thinking the the heating issue wasprobably an air pocket in the coolant that caused a temporary air lockor a thermostat trying to stick closed but haven't looked further intoit yet. I have no idea what the drivetrain issue was and that is whatI'm mainly asking about. Anyone else ever had an experience like thisor any clue as to what is going on?A little history on the car. Its a 2000 subaru outback, 5 speed manual, 4cylinder engine and has all wheel drive. I can't remember the mileageoff the top of my head but shortly after getting the car the clutch wasslipping so i replaced the clutch and bearings with a sachs brand clutchkit. While the engine was out i replace the timing belts and pulleysand water pump with a Gates kit. I also replace the front main seal and ithink a couple other oil seals that had been leaking. I did this workabout 2 years ago and have probably only put about 10000 miles on itsince. This is usually a car i just use around town when I'm home andrarely drive it to work so it doesn't see a lot of mileage. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
1 Lucky Texan Posted November 15, 2016 Share Posted November 15, 2016 (edited) so odd. Any work done before this occured? trans or diff swaps? Any coolant work - new thermostat? (they need to be OEM style with the larger wax capsule) um...does the car have 4 tires that are the same brand/model/size and near each othe rin wear? Will the car smoothly drive in tight circles on dry pavement? just a wild gusee that maybe the car was stopped with some torque bind and the brakes slipped when you were doing your overheat investigation. but it's just a wild guess - maybe others will know if that's even possible. I guess I'd check for a binding brake caliper too? Maybe the fans are intermittent - was the "city traffic" stop&go or very slow? Edited November 15, 2016 by 1 Lucky Texan Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
montana tom Posted November 15, 2016 Share Posted November 15, 2016 (edited) Wow this is a tricky one. I'm wondering if your transmission has a bad shift fork or bearings, maybe a broken shaft inside. No way should it have behaved like that in neutral. Your heating problem could have a lot to do with your transmission binding up. I assume you have checked the dipstick on the trans and its full ?Might be a good idea to pull the drain plug and check for metal. I could be completely off base about your heating issue ... but until you fix the transmission no need to worry about it heating up. Edited November 15, 2016 by montana tom Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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