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Subaru Legacy/Outback Oil and Other Fluid Questions

41 messages, Last post on Oct 28, 2009 at 3:10 PM
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Replying to: ateixeira (Oct 16, 2009 7:16 am) Remove the bottom bolt 2nd, drain the oil in an oil drain pan. Replace the bottom bolt, and use a hand pump to add oil in the top hole. The stuff is thick so be ready for a little bit of work here, especially if it's cold. Basically buy one quart and top it off. When it begins to spill, it's full. Wipe it clean. Replace the top bolt, voila, you're done. This is for the rear differential. For the front/center, there should be a dipstick, and the fluid is filled there. There is a drain in the bottom that now uses a T70 Torx fitting, though a T60 works fine, too (T70 can be tough to find!). I am not sure if the Torx was being used on your model year, but the drain plug should be pretty easy to find - between the oil pan plug and the transmission pan plug (if yours is an automatic).
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Replying to: xwesx (Oct 16, 2009 8:43 am) Yeah, look for a yellow dipstick. Not easy to find, though. For that instead of the pump use a funnel with a long tube attached to it. It'll take far more than just one quart, also. The drain plug is a flat nut at the bottom of the transmission casing, IIRC I want to say it's a 17mm? Maybe bigger.
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Replying to: ateixeira (Oct 16, 2009 10:10 am) I use the pump to fill my front/center differentials as well. I have a long-neck funnel, but it is tough to access that opening, especially on newer models. When I put the synthetic 75w-90 in my 2010 Forester a couple weeks ago, there is no way I could have accessed the port with a funnel. I had to pump a gallon of gear lube by hand. Well, i think it was something like 7.9 pints, so almost a gallon, but that is for a manual transmission, so I would think the differential only needs about half of that. I'm just being lazy and not using my own link to look up the info for the OP.
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Replying to: xwesx (Oct 16, 2009 10:50 am) I used a funnel with a long plastic tube. That tube ran down to the dip stick, which is also the fill hole for gear oil on the manual trans. |
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Replying to: ateixeira (Oct 16, 2009 11:21 am) If this is an Automatic you have Front Diffy, Rear Diffy and the Automatic Trans Fluids. If this is a MT, then you have Front Diffy combined with the Manual Trans Fluid and the Rear Diffy. Front Diffy on an AT takes less than 1 Quart, Rear takes about 1 Quart. Front Diffy + Manual Trans on an MT takes 3 Quarts, Rear takes about 1 Quart. Filling the Front Diffy on the AT is a Dipstick (the side will depend if it's a Turbo or a Non Turbo). Filling the Automatic Trans Fluid is a Dipstick (the side will depend if it's a Turbo or not) Rear Diffy on AT or MT is upper bolt on the casing itself. -mike Subaru Guru and Track Instructor
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Replying to: paisan (Oct 18, 2009 7:31 pm) |
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Replying to: paisan (Oct 18, 2009 7:31 pm) I have a 1990 Subaru Legacy that appears to have some center differential issues. It is an AWD model, but when both front wheels OR both rear wheels are on a low-traction surface, one of the wheels on that axle spins and torque is not shifted to the other axle. In other words, both axles get torque at different times, but no shifting of torque between axles happens when it is supposed to.
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Replying to: nv1z (Oct 28, 2009 1:46 pm) |
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