Most reliable for £2.5k - Subaru Legacy or Volve V70 AWD
Most reliable for £2.5k - Subaru Legacy or Volve V70 AWD
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Liquid Tuna

Original Poster:

1,403 posts

178 months

Saturday 24th December 2011
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As the title really, given a budget of £2.5k and you needed to buy the most reliable AWD estate car available, which would you choose? Subaru Legacy or Volvo V70 AWD? I've already ruled out an A4 or A6 quattro avant because I don't think they'll be as reliable as the other 2.


rovermorris999

5,312 posts

211 months

Saturday 24th December 2011
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Subaru without a doubt. I've had them for years. My first Legacy, a poverty spec ex-company car, went from 55k to 135k in my ownership. It needed a clutch at 120k (the wife tends to ride it, one reason I now have an auto), otherwise nothing. Not even a bush or joint. It was still on the original battery and exhaust when sold.
People tend to be down on the interiors and while they may not have fancy soft-touch plastics they wear well and don't break. Plus the AWD system is very well developed and reliable.

Jimbo.

4,164 posts

211 months

Saturday 24th December 2011
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Heard too many bad things about the AWD system of V70s around/below this price point, so of the two, I'd take the Subaru.

Luke.

11,772 posts

272 months

Saturday 24th December 2011
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Subaru every single time.

Pobolycwm

327 posts

202 months

Saturday 24th December 2011
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My legacy is 55 plate 85k, one headlamp bulb and one interior bulb in that time, one advisory at mot for front wishbone bushes showing signs of wear but still ok, plan to keep it for at least another 3 yrs no real wear just a bit of tear, a few dents from a branch falling on it and where a horse kicked it, dogs have had a bit of a chew on rear head rests

Not as big as a Volvo inside and driver legroom a bit tight for my 6'2" after 150 miles, four wheel drive worked in the snow last year and haven't got stuck in any fields towing, always goes where you point it.

Oldandslow

2,405 posts

228 months

Saturday 24th December 2011
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If it's a normally aspirated Legacy then I'd say go for it. The 4wd drive is a simple robust system and the rest is typical Japanese build quality. If it's turbocharged I'd hesitate just because the engines are a bit highly stressed. I'd probably still buy it though because they're a hoot and I'm biased but the Volvo would win out on reliability and economy at that point.

Jw Vw

4,904 posts

185 months

Saturday 24th December 2011
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Another vote for the Subaru.

GravelBen

16,317 posts

252 months

Saturday 24th December 2011
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Oldandslow said:
If it's a normally aspirated Legacy then I'd say go for it. The 4wd drive is a simple robust system and the rest is typical Japanese build quality. If it's turbocharged I'd hesitate just because the engines are a bit highly stressed. I'd probably still buy it though because they're a hoot and I'm biased but the Volvo would win out on reliability and economy at that point.
As long as they're maintained sensibly and not abused/badly modified the turbos are reliable too, my '02 GTB (2.0 twin-turbo 280bhp) has been almost faultless over the 3 years and 40,000km I've had it. It will do 32mpg easily enough on a run and I usually average 26ish in mixed use.

There is less to potentially go wrong with a naturally aspirated one though I agree.

EDLT

15,421 posts

228 months

Saturday 24th December 2011
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GravelBen said:
Oldandslow said:
If it's a normally aspirated Legacy then I'd say go for it. The 4wd drive is a simple robust system and the rest is typical Japanese build quality. If it's turbocharged I'd hesitate just because the engines are a bit highly stressed. I'd probably still buy it though because they're a hoot and I'm biased but the Volvo would win out on reliability and economy at that point.
As long as they're maintained sensibly and not abused/badly modified the turbos are reliable too, my '02 GTB (2.0 twin-turbo 280bhp) has been almost faultless over the 3 years and 40,000km I've had it. It will do 32mpg easily enough on a run and I usually average 26ish in mixed use.

There is less to potentially go wrong with a naturally aspirated one though I agree.
Over here the turbos are bought by the sort that don't drive carefully, NA cars are all bought to carry dogs and tow caravans. The turbo-charged Forester seems to have been missed by chavs though.

Monsterlime

1,414 posts

188 months

Saturday 24th December 2011
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What is the MPG like on the N/A Legacy? I need to get a cheap car as a station shed, and am considering one.

Pobolycwm

327 posts

202 months

Sunday 25th December 2011
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Mine is auto 2 litre, locally 32 mpg, steady run 38, average over year 36, if driven enthusiastically ( well not in old fool mode ) will drop to mid twenties