Treat the front bumper as sacrificial and eventually replace with an outback one which has a little better approach angle.
Also since it's strut all the way around, how about fabbing up some simple spacers, to raise it up 40mm or so (assuming there is enough alignment range to stay within spec), then bigger tires....lower gears....lockers....NOOOOOOOOO!!!!!:Wow1:
A strut spacer as someone else mentioned will give you more body lift at the expense of further loss of droop in the suspension, which is probably fine within limits. Skid plates, etc. should be the same.
Assuming (we all know how that goes) the top of the "shock" part of the strut does not mount independantly of the spring seat, a properly engineered spacer lift, will simply move the available travel away from the body by the spacer amount. This is also assuming there is enough ball joint and CV travel to use the available travel at the new ride height. You neither loose or gain anything but more clearance, and a slightly higher CG.
the GrpN 4pots will fit under 15" rally wheels.
Learn this ASAP and you'll be happy for a long time: Subarus are the ultimate "Lego" car - just about everything from one will bolt on to another (with a few exceptions and occasionally a few tweaks or swearing).
I'm running '06 WRX TR brakes (4-piston front, 2-piston rear) on my '02 WRX wagon. I've also got '05 STi seats (w/ Airbags), and a few other interior bits.
I'm also running '04 Outback Sport (Impreza) springs for a small lift. The one adaptation I had to make was to switch to '04+ top-hats as the springs are slightly differently shaped. This change then dictated '04+ struts or a small adapter spacer on my 02 struts. I opted for the spacer. If I'd switched to newer struts I would have sold my 02 struts to the Forester guys because they're coveted as "lowering" strut for certain year ranges.
So, to answer your call for thoughts: Stick with the same model year (or at least body/suspension generation) and it should be a bolt-on swap. Expect a small lift, as the Impreza vs. Outback Sport difference was only like 1/2", and I think the Legacy vs. Outback difference is similar.
A strut spacer as someone else mentioned will give you more body lift at the expense of further loss of droop in the suspension, which is probably fine within limits. Skid plates, etc. should be the same.
Do you have a build thread for this Car of yours herbie cause it sounds SWEET!!!!Learn this ASAP and you'll be happy for a long time: Subarus are the ultimate "Lego" car - just about everything from one will bolt on to another (with a few exceptions and occasionally a few tweaks or swearing).
I'm running '06 WRX TR brakes (4-piston front, 2-piston rear) on my '02 WRX wagon. I've also got '05 STi seats (w/ Airbags), and a few other interior bits.
I'm also running '04 Outback Sport (Impreza) springs for a small lift. The one adaptation I had to make was to switch to '04+ top-hats as the springs are slightly differently shaped. This change then dictated '04+ struts or a small adapter spacer on my 02 struts. I opted for the spacer. If I'd switched to newer struts I would have sold my 02 struts to the Forester guys because they're coveted as "lowering" strut for certain year ranges.
So, to answer your call for thoughts: Stick with the same model year (or at least body/suspension generation) and it should be a bolt-on swap. Expect a small lift, as the Impreza vs. Outback Sport difference was only like 1/2", and I think the Legacy vs. Outback difference is similar.
A strut spacer as someone else mentioned will give you more body lift at the expense of further loss of droop in the suspension, which is probably fine within limits. Skid plates, etc. should be the same.