Before my misses and I became a single unit. I owned a 2000 Subaru outback, and she owned a 2005 Honda cr-v. Both amazing great cars. (i still have the hots for the Subaru) But, what car is overall better.
With that, both cars achieve very very close mpgs. the outback 25-26 mpg, the Honda, 23-25mpg. (i calculated ever fill-up). Both awd, and both very impressive with their abilities for off-road (ie gravel roads, icy conditions, and off-roading). The cr-v was better for off-road use, the outback better for winter driving. *cr-v better in deep snow
The Honda was better with higher clearance, and better performance.
The subi. had better mpg, and more comfortable for the long hauls. And felt more stable for highway driving. The seats folded flat in the back for a sleeping/storage space.(Honda did not)
Pricing is very close, but would say the subi., is cheaper up front, but the Honda holds its value better. Only if subi came out the diesel, life would be so much easier.
Maintenances and repair cost???? that might be the deciding factor.
Currently, my subi. hit an elk(show him whose the boss!), and we traded the honda for a 2006 tundra DC. so offroading and major use is on the toyota for us. Currently the 2nd vehicle is an 98 impreza, but does NOT secure a car seat rear facing securely for our 2 year old.
(and we are expecting)
Therefore, a 2nd vehicle (with the tundra in mind) reasoning will be based off of: (hopefully other family’s will coincide similarly so this thread will benefit others)
Absolute most:
Safety
car seat fitting and safely (rear facing)
is TOP priority, and the tundra does this for us, but the impreza does not.
other top factors for the 2nd vehicle include:
mileage
awd
cost
reliability
off-road ability
wear & tear cost
comfort
I am considering a 2004-05 forester XT, but am worried the mileage and the reliability would offset the extreme performance the XT offers. Perhaps a 2004+ outback that bypasses the head gasket problem. But again, a 2005 cr-v is very reliable, high mpg, very safe, great offroad, and is overall a great vechile.
Thoughts??
With that, both cars achieve very very close mpgs. the outback 25-26 mpg, the Honda, 23-25mpg. (i calculated ever fill-up). Both awd, and both very impressive with their abilities for off-road (ie gravel roads, icy conditions, and off-roading). The cr-v was better for off-road use, the outback better for winter driving. *cr-v better in deep snow
The Honda was better with higher clearance, and better performance.
The subi. had better mpg, and more comfortable for the long hauls. And felt more stable for highway driving. The seats folded flat in the back for a sleeping/storage space.(Honda did not)
Pricing is very close, but would say the subi., is cheaper up front, but the Honda holds its value better. Only if subi came out the diesel, life would be so much easier.
Maintenances and repair cost???? that might be the deciding factor.
Currently, my subi. hit an elk(show him whose the boss!), and we traded the honda for a 2006 tundra DC. so offroading and major use is on the toyota for us. Currently the 2nd vehicle is an 98 impreza, but does NOT secure a car seat rear facing securely for our 2 year old.
(and we are expecting)
Therefore, a 2nd vehicle (with the tundra in mind) reasoning will be based off of: (hopefully other family’s will coincide similarly so this thread will benefit others)
Absolute most:
Safety
car seat fitting and safely (rear facing)
is TOP priority, and the tundra does this for us, but the impreza does not.
other top factors for the 2nd vehicle include:
mileage
awd
cost
reliability
off-road ability
wear & tear cost
comfort
I am considering a 2004-05 forester XT, but am worried the mileage and the reliability would offset the extreme performance the XT offers. Perhaps a 2004+ outback that bypasses the head gasket problem. But again, a 2005 cr-v is very reliable, high mpg, very safe, great offroad, and is overall a great vechile.
Thoughts??