RE: Subaru Outback | Shed of the Week

RE: Subaru Outback | Shed of the Week

Friday 17th May

Subaru Outback | Shed of the Week

The Outback helped solidify Subaru's farm-tough reputation. But does that make it a good shed?


Ah yes, the sun has nearly got his hat on and the roads are almost drying out, so it’s obviously time for a nifty little sports convertible. Welcome then to this week’s sub-£2k special, a Subaru Outback.

Shed is actually doing you a favour here because all the nifty little sports convertibles in the classifieds have already been priced up to the max for the summer, whenever or wherever that might be. That’ll teach you for not buying one in the depths of winter. Plus this Outback has a gurt big electric sunroof so you can easily imagine you’re in a ragtop. 

According to Subaru, who should know best, the Outback is the car that saved the company. It was very popular among preppies and boomers in the US. The one we’ve got here is a clean-looking, low-mileage example of the gen-three (designation BP9 for the 2.5 ‘crossover’ estate) model that first came into being in 2003. For its motive power, the gen-three continued with the non-turbo 2.5 flat four ‘boxer’ petrol engine that had been burbling away in the Outback since the very first 1994-on gen-one. It generated 162hp at 5,600rpm and 167lb ft at 4,400rpm, so it isn’t rapid (123mph and 0-60mph in 9.4 seconds), economical (33mpg official average, low 20s unofficial), or especially cheap to tax (£395), but it does have bags of character. 

These Subarus also have something called Symmetrical AWD. Plenty of old motors with decidedly asymmetrical AWDs have passed through Shed’s calloused old hands but the system on the Subaru – full-time with 50/50 torque split front to rear under normal conditions and (Shed thinks) a viscous-coupling limited slip differential – was tough and worked well. In SE spec the car offered a kind of hardy luxury with air con, climate and cruise control, heated seats and full moo, which as you can see from the pictures appears to be wearing well. 

What about under the skin though? On pre-2011 cars, the 2.5s had timing belts rather than chains. These should be changed along with the water pumps every seven years of 105,000 miles. Lots of covers and ancillary items have to be removed for access so it’s not a quick or, by extension, cheap job, but we’re in luck because it was done early on this 92,000-miler, in January of this year. 

The engines sometimes suffered from a sudden code-free loss of power that could be down to a whole range of causes from coils to corroded ground straps via leaky intake hose gaskets and below-par fuel pumps. Coolant and specifically head gasket leaks were common, and clutch plates could shatter. Air con compressors failed, outside door handles crumbled in colder climes and underbody corrosion was always a threat. 

The good news on this car is that the rust that was noticed on the 2023 MOT test – rear subframe, exhaust and body – was all addressed. Windscreen damage and a worn front brake were put right too. The most recent test in January of this year mentioned slight play in the rear anti-roll bar ball joints but from the looks of it the car has been given whatever it needed as each test came round. The last owner was probably a mature type, clearly evidenced here by the selection of Radio 2 on the radio and by the presence on the dash of a stick-on LCD clock. Whenever Shed sees one of these he thinks of his long-lost Dad, Shiplap Shed, who along with many dads of his age loved to buy tat like this. The thinking was that others would be impressed by your space-age tech when in fact everybody knew they were £1.99 or, if you were lucky, free in a Christmas cracker.

Apparently after the dealer washed this one the tailgate stopped opening. Sometimes the tailgate handles do stick in the up position but it’s not a hard fix as Subaru thoughtfully provided a removable bit of interior tailgate trim that allowed for examination of the latch assembly. Squirting some releasing fluid in there and on the handle pivot points should sort it out. If it’s a fob thing Shed reckons that should be easy too: just press the button for 10 seconds until you feel something physical happening. He uses the same technique when the postmistress comes over. The trick is to resist the natural temptation to let go of the button when it squeaks at you three times. Keep pressing and you should get a proper result. That’s what Shed finds anyway.  

The Sheds do most of their doings in their old Merc estate, from takeaway collections to tip runs. For some reason Mrs Shed doesn’t like Shed using the rear entrance for load insertions, so if they bought this Outback it wouldn’t really matter if the tailgate worked or not. The gurt big sunroof has a huge flap on it too but the less said about that the better. 


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Author
Discussion

Billy_Whizzzz

Original Poster:

2,031 posts

145 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
Looks brilliant and am tempted even though I categorically don’t need it. Presumably will continue to rust like Billyho but irrespective, shed of the year for me.

Jordie Barretts sock

4,745 posts

21 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
Proper shed. Different to the usual Merc/BMW shed options. Like that, no use for it, but like it.

Edited by Jordie Barretts sock on Friday 17th May 06:52

sinisterpenguin

28 posts

21 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
Never understood peoples fascination with these thing but 5 stars for this week’s innuendo

sjabrown

1,938 posts

162 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
Proper farmer shed there. One of those vehicles that can live on beyond expectation like diesel Peugeot 205s and K11 micras.

aarondbs

848 posts

148 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
Love these. Never had one, I absolutely don’t need one but there’s been something about them. I think it’s the dream of reliving my childhood, driving down red mud roads through Africa. May not be quite the same in Derbyshire!!


Augustus Windsock

3,387 posts

157 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
“He uses the same technique when the postmistress comes over. The trick is to resist the natural temptation to let go of the button when it squeaks at you three times. Keep pressing and you should get a proper result. That’s what Shed finds anyway. ”

Dear Shed,
You know owe me the cost of having my armchair professionally cleaned after I spat out a mouthful of hot tea laughing!

jwwbowe

582 posts

174 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
Brilliant cars. Though the flat six chain driven version is my preferred choice. Our one had to go to the great shed in the sky though as rot takes a hold on these. Check under the arch covers! Would have another but VED on them is frankly ridiculous now. They are so well put together, quite good to work on to.


idealstandard

650 posts

57 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
I had a 3.0 one of these for many years - annoyingly on an 06 plate so high tax, it could go basically anywhere, took it on numerous road trips around europe, was a great car. Fun to drive too. Only issue I ever had with it was a coolant pipe rusting out, cheap fix

Bobupndown

1,876 posts

45 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
Top shed this week, practical spacious 4x4 estate, fuel consumption might be a bit painful (I'd prefer the diesel getmecoat)

Top 3 beep button pressing too!

Robigus

42 posts

234 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
I have the 3 litre six Legacy version. Bloody great car. Tough as boots and very comfortable. That’s on the earlier VED rating too.

Trip computer displays often give up. I’ve remade the soldered joints in mine and in occasion it deigns to provide me with information. Not very often, mind.

Fitted a generic Bluetooth box and so the phone can hook up.

It’s downside is lack of aural drama, but as I was quoted £4,400 for an OEM exhaust system, will be addressed in the future by a bloke with some stainless tubes.

Angelo1985

256 posts

28 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
It would be a yes, if it had a better engine smile

Slowlygettingit

653 posts

43 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
Hmmmm…….Shiplap Shed

Can see an occasional spin iff feature here featuring ‘classsics’

Quick before Netflix turn it into a dire mini series

pycraft

808 posts

186 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
"it’s not a hard fix as Subaru thoughtfully provided a removable bit of interior tailgate trim that allowed for examination of the latch assembly"

Good to know, if case you're ever kidnapped in one.

86wasagoodyear

426 posts

98 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
Had 2 of these in lower-riding Legacy flavour, both brilliant. Would prefer the hardier 2.0 or 3.0 engines to this 2.5, but even so, top shedding.

yme402

405 posts

104 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
For £2000, shouts old money in a way a new BMW/Audi/Mercedes or Range Rover Evoque could only dream of doing.

georgeyboy12345

3,563 posts

37 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
I like it, even though it’s probably rubbish.

cerb4.5lee

31,006 posts

182 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
sinisterpenguin said:
Never understood peoples fascination with these thing but 5 stars for this week’s innuendo
Same. The car isn't for me, but I did absolutely love the innuendo though for sure! biggrin

911Spanker

1,287 posts

18 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
yme402 said:
For £2000, shouts old money in a way a new BMW/Audi/Mercedes or Range Rover Evoque could only dream of doing.
Isn't there a line about whispering wealth or some other rubbish?!

GianiCakes

208 posts

75 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
Such a great looking car and they were good to drive as well. With a design like this and the engineering quality they were known for it’s crazy how badly Subaru have lost their way since.

Hippea

1,858 posts

71 months

Friday 17th May
quotequote all
Good car