'06 Subaru Legacy

  • Thread starter eastwardbound2003
  • Start date
E

eastwardbound2003

I test drove the Legacy today and needless to say I am in love. The
car had the 5-speed and the whole time it begged and begged to be
driven faster and faster. I had to put the car in neutral and step on
the brake which is something I don't normally ever have do on a car
with a manual transmission.

What are the downsides though? Doesn't it used premium gas? The one I
test drove was turbocharged.

Is regular servicing very expensive? Don't the multiple differentials
need to be flushed periodically? How does Subaru rate as far as dealer
support goes once servicing becomes necessary? Lexus is hear is at the
top in that regaurd.

How much can it tow? I'm guessing 2,500 pounds just like the Subaru
Baja? Enough to tow a small trailer.



East-
 
I test drove the Legacy today and needless to say I am in love. The
car had the 5-speed and the whole time it begged and begged to be
driven faster and faster. I had to put the car in neutral and step on
the brake which is something I don't normally ever have do on a car
with a manual transmission.

What are the downsides though? Doesn't it used premium gas? The one I
test drove was turbocharged.

Is regular servicing very expensive? Don't the multiple differentials
need to be flushed periodically? How does Subaru rate as far as dealer
support goes once servicing becomes necessary? Lexus is hear is at the
top in that regaurd.

How much can it tow? I'm guessing 2,500 pounds just like the Subaru
Baja? Enough to tow a small trailer.



East-

91 octane minimum
see the maint schedule
find a good dealer; the bad ones are lousy
yes on Lexus from what i've heard...they kiss butt whether you buy new or
used
2,000 IIRC
 
It's a good car, I have the 05 auto tranny, I love it. Not sure about
towing capacity but I am sure it will show it on the Subaru site.

It does use premium gas and the fuel economy for a 4 cylinder engine is
quite poor. On the bright side, the performance is very comparable to a lot
of luxery sport sedans. Very modifiable if you are interested in doing
stuff like that. Best thing to do is to check out www.legacygt.com great
forum with a lot of insights and a pre purchase message board that will
probably answer a lot of your questions if you do a forum search. Good luck
and hope you join the fray.
 
Premium fuel? I don't think so. Differentials fluid changing from
Never to 15,000 miles for frequent trailer towing.
 
I have a '05 with the 5-speed and turbo for nearly a year, and I also love
it. I typically use regular around town and premium on the highway.

I further improved it by mounting a Garmin GPS in the cassette storage above
the radio.

Chris
 
(e-mail address removed) wrote in @g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com:
I test drove the Legacy today and needless to say I am in love. The
car had the 5-speed and the whole time it begged and begged to be
driven faster and faster. I had to put the car in neutral and step on
the brake which is something I don't normally ever have do on a car
with a manual transmission.

What are the downsides though? Doesn't it used premium gas? The one I
test drove was turbocharged.

Turbo version required premium, non-turbo doesn't. 250HP vs 175HP
Is regular servicing very expensive? Don't the multiple differentials
need to be flushed periodically? How does Subaru rate as far as dealer
support goes once servicing becomes necessary? Lexus is hear is at the
top in that regaurd.

How much can it tow? I'm guessing 2,500 pounds just like the Subaru
Baja? Enough to tow a small trailer.

Most of these questions can likely be answered on their website.
 
Fuzzy said:
Turbo version required premium, non-turbo doesn't. 250HP vs 175HP


Pretty big difference! I have a 2000 model with 160 HP, which I find is
definitely ample. I guess I'm not a power hog.

Years ago, I had a 1986 Saab 900 turbo. If I drove with a light foot, I
could increase the fuel efficiency by a lot, about 30%! Does the Subaru
turbo do that, too?
 
"Premium fuel? I don't think so"

What do you mean by that? Legacy GT uses premium gas. Not regular or
midgrade. Did I miss something here?
 
Years ago, I had a 1986 Saab 900 turbo. If I drove with a light foot, I
could increase the fuel efficiency by a lot, about 30%! Does the Subaru
turbo do that, too?

I have a 2005 Legacy GT. Around town I get 21-22 mpg. On the highway
for long trips it goes up to 28-30. Of course, judging by how others
act, I seem to have a lead foot when the light turns green. I don't
think I know how to drive with a light foot.

Jim
 
I got the 2005 LGT. It is one nice machine. I've modded
my car a bit and added the following:
- Cobb Access Port
- gutted uppipe
- gutted downpipe shorty
- TDC tuning custom map stage II
- Brembo front big brake kit
- ion lowering springs
- front and rear cusco sways

car puts down about 255whp ( 340hp at the crank ). If I swap
in a new 18G turbo and perrin tmic I can achieve close
to 300whp ( 380hp crank ), a 20G gives me 350whp ( 430 crank )

welcome to the wonderful world of Subaru and affordable power :)))
My car runs neck and neck with a stock M3 however the
Legacy has ENORMOUS potential, it has the identical engine
of the sti which can run reliably up to 500hp....

go for it- you won't regret it! :)
 
Jim said:
I have a 2005 Legacy GT. Around town I get 21-22 mpg. On the highway
for long trips it goes up to 28-30. Of course, judging by how others
act, I seem to have a lead foot when the light turns green. I don't
think I know how to drive with a light foot.

Nah it's just that the flat four has a *lot* of torque down low.
 
Bruce said:
Nah it's just that the flat four has a *lot* of torque down low.

Pretend you have a block under your accelerator pedal, preventing you
from pressing it down more than half way. Or maybe put a real block there.

It only takes about four days to get used to it. Try it. And buy
yourself some chocolate or rent some nice videos as your reward for
saving your money, reducing pollution, and saving precious fossil fuels.

As for torque, my Saab had more low end torque than my 2000 2.5 liter
Subaru. But I'm not complaining about torque. I am complaining about the
fuel efficiency. The Saab was faster and it consumed less fuel!
 
Tom said:
Pretend you have a block under your accelerator pedal, preventing you
from pressing it down more than half way. Or maybe put a real block there.

I was told to drive like there is an egg between
your foot and the accelerator :)
 
I was told to drive like there is an egg between
your foot and the accelerator :)

Why not drive like you want, but replace some car trips with
bicycling, walking, or the bus?
 

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