HardwareBoB wrote:TBSTis have it even worse.
Lots of cars have blown up with this factory issue after being driven very slowly, then purchased with "low km" and driven more agressively - and then the latent issue that was always there grenades the motor.
Deeply upsetting issue. When I first purchased the vehicle I was super excited, even though at the time it was well out of my budget and affordable price range. But I loved the car. I have had it since 10k kms, it was a demo vehicle - so I am the 'original' and only owner and expect to keep it until the end.
If I had known at the time I was purchasing a vehicle that that had such an inherent flaw, I would have avoided it.
Some further information I have sourced, which is an interesting read (US owner):
"2008 and 2009 models of the Subaru Legacy 2.5 engines had the piston heads, connector rods and ringlands made by a different subcontractor for this year. These heads are substandard compared to the 2005,6 and 7 year models. What happens is (to make it easy to understand) the pouring of the molds for these happens too fast, and bubbles can form under the surface.
Where the failure occurs is at higher temperatures, higher advanced timings that can occur from self tuning or using an accessport, or even something AS SIMPLE AS CHANGING THE AIR FILTER TO ALLOW MORE AIR FLOW can change the timing. If the engine runs too hot, those bubbles can cause minute failures, where the bubbles collapse. This skews the precision shape of the head, and in turn, the ringland can possibly be misshapen allowing oil blow-by.
This can be a vicious cycle until catastrophic failure. Which is what happened to my car."
http://legacygt.com/forums/showthread.p ... 19079.htmlEven though Subaru Australia may try and claim that the vehicle is outside of warranty, they are still accountable under Australian Consumer Laws and Statutory rights.
- Statutory rights have no time limit other than what's reasonable
- any action against Subaru must be started within 3 years of of consumer becoming aware of fault and within 10 years of the date goods supplied.
- the dealer and/or Subaru Australia should have disclosed at point of sale that the vehicle was part of a stop sale due to a major mechanical flaw. This critical information should have been made known to the consumer to make a sound purchasing decision.
I have been a long time fan of the Subaru brand and have always thought them to be reliable and the brands customer service one that inspires loyalty. But this issue is really steering me away from the brand, which is disappointing.
I urge all who has a 2.5T engine VIN that falls in the range, or a build date 01/08 - 03/08 to have their vehicle assessed before its too late.
MY08 Liberty GT-B TB STi #208 (Ob. Black)
Build plate 02/08