Subaru Help

Laxaholic

Adventurer
About 8 months ago, my brother wrecked and totaled my 2006 Subaru Impreza wagon 2.5i 5spd in Aspen white....it was a great car. Nice stereo I put in it, great AWD and MPG...a little ugly, but still a good car. I miss it. Right now, I'm driving my Dad's old 1998 1500 z71, which is great. I'm sure all of you can appreciate it as a great 4wd, but it gets less than desirable MPG, around 11-12 in town, about 15 on the road. Gas is cheap FOR NOW, but will go up in the future I am sure. I'm 23 and about to graduate, and don't want to have a car payment...just don't feel the need to be locked down with one right now.

So here's my question, I have the chance to pick up a rust-free 1982 Subaru GL wagon 4spd that's in pretty good shape for 1500$. Needs carb rebuilt, but the guy says he'll throw in the kit to do it. Should I pick it up? 162,000 miles, no rust, decent for such an old car. Has the Hi/LO range gearbox. What should I do? Thanks
 

calicamper

Expedition Leader
I wouldn't they should be giving it to you for free given its going to cost you more to get it running reliably than its worth. I own a subaru and like Subaru but in your case no. Drive the borrowed wheels as long as you can dad may even see it as a great excuse to go find him self a new ride and be happy with you keeping the truck for as long as you need. Get the first big boy job out of school going and sort out your car plan after you have a budget going etc. My brother drove a 1979 Dodge Top Hand Short bed yellow pickup no joke horn played yellow rose of texas for 8yrs grandpas old truck till he was long out of college and had some income going then bought a Toyota Matrix new. He got 6-8mpg and was just glad he had wheels when he needed them. That didn't cost him anything. Shockingly that truck never needed a single repair and years later I spotted it around the corner from my house in San Francisco! I spotted the owner one day and told him that truck was bought new by my grandfather and spent its first 20yrs working on a cattle ranch then its next 8yrs as my brothers transportation. HA HA He was laughing and couldn't believe it. He said other than changing some fluids he hadn't done a thing to it.
 
I would want to say yes, but only if you have good access to parts, are quite familiar with the vehicle inside and out, good with a wrench and have a nice place to work on it. That said, it would be an epic 2nd or toy car, but it's a 32 year old car. It could be fine, but chances are good you will be chasing down a lot of annoying little problems that will nickle and dime you a lot. Man, that would be soooo tempting, though. A very cool rig. I drive the same car you had in black with an automatic. I feel your pain. Drive the truck with a light foot to save pennies on gas, save up for that elderly maintained and driven Outback or Forester that's 4 or 5 years old in mint shape going for a song.
 

GregSplett

Adventurer
The only reason I ended up with my 93 was that people are asking the same if not more for a car from the eighties.The problem for me anyways is that there are less of them hitting the junk yards and as demand goes down for the aftermarket parts the more they cost.ten years ago i could find one for $500. to $700. now it is a $1000.+.

That said the mileage in that car is not that much for a taken care of ea81.I killed one with the odometer broke at 345,000 with original clutch.My first one went for 270,000 before the wife wrecked it.

I would not pay that much unless it ran great.Rebuilding those old Asian smog carbs is a gamble.Needs a rebuilt carb is more like it.It is probably old vacuum line anyways but who knows.

If you are experienced enough to replace the front axles,can tell when a radiator is plugged,and can swap the old carb with a Weber,And you could get the price down I would say ya.
 

Laxaholic

Adventurer
I would continue driving the truck, but my sister has just turned 16 and it will go to her to drive. So I'm just looking for something, anything. I obviously have very little to spend, and don't like the thought of a loan. I don't like automatics in cars either.
 

libarata

Expedition Leader
Keep the truck, use the 1500 bucks to pay down debt. Also, your brother owes you a car. Lesson learned, don't let folks NOT on your insurance to drive your vehicles.
 

Laxaholic

Adventurer
As I said above, I can't keep the truck.

I have ZERO debt, rooted in my hatred of loans. No school debt, no nothing.

Brother wrecked the car while I was outside the country, not much I can do there.
 

calicamper

Expedition Leader
Keep the truck, use the 1500 bucks to pay down debt. Also, your brother owes you a car. Lesson learned, don't let folks NOT on your insurance to drive your vehicles.

Oh yes thats a big no no. My dad was hit head on by a gal driving a borrowed explorer. Owner had insurance she did not and was not listed on his. Short version of the story $150,000 in medical bills and lost wages my dads insurance company went after the owner last I heard he was forced to sell his house to settle his debt.

Insurance companies go after uninsured like rabid dogs! Don't do it!
 

libarata

Expedition Leader
As I said above, I can't keep the truck.

I have ZERO debt, rooted in my hatred of loans. No school debt, no nothing.

Brother wrecked the car while I was outside the country, not much I can do there.

I missed the part of the truck. Look for something a little newer, and go the route of a personal loan. I bought my 99 Forester S for 4k. The GLS are cool, but even my 99 Forester has a hard time finding parts for. The personal loan would keep you out from under full insurance mandates, and would be less expensive in the long run.

As far as your brother, he is ****ty if he wont help with a new vehicle. I love both of mine, but Gods help them if they destroyed something of mine.
 

ducktapeguy

Adventurer
About 8 months ago, my brother wrecked and totaled my 2006 Subaru Impreza wagon 2.5i 5spd in Aspen white....it was a great car. Nice stereo I put in it, great AWD and MPG...a little ugly, but still a good car. I miss it. Right now, I'm driving my Dad's old 1998 1500 z71, which is great. I'm sure all of you can appreciate it as a great 4wd, but it gets less than desirable MPG, around 11-12 in town, about 15 on the road. Gas is cheap FOR NOW, but will go up in the future I am sure. I'm 23 and about to graduate, and don't want to have a car payment...just don't feel the need to be locked down with one right now.

So here's my question, I have the chance to pick up a rust-free 1982 Subaru GL wagon 4spd that's in pretty good shape for 1500$. Needs carb rebuilt, but the guy says he'll throw in the kit to do it. Should I pick it up? 162,000 miles, no rust, decent for such an old car. Has the Hi/LO range gearbox. What should I do? Thanks

This comment should be raising some red flags. Whenever I see a car that only needs xxxxxx (new battery, oil change, carb rebuild, tune-up, etc.) that's always a warning sign that there's a lot more to be done. Why? Because if the problem was something simple, and they already have the parts to do it, why wouldn't they just fix it and sell the car without any issues? What it really means the car has a lot of problems and they're sick of throwing money at it, that's why they're selling it.

If it were me, for another thousand or so, you could be getting something half the age, even if it has more miles. Sound like a lot of money at first, but you'll either spend that money up front on a newer car, or spend it in repairs. Even though the mileage is low on that Subaru, it's still a 30+ year old car, things are still going to break due to old age.

You need to have your handy ad translator when looking at used cars

Needs tuneup = Needs new engine
needs carb rebuild = Can't figure out why it's running like crap, probably just needs a tuneup (see above)
Just needs a battery = Electrical problem, kills batteries. needs new alternator as well
radiator recently replaced = overheated and didn't notice until the steam obstructed my view. Changed the radiator but don't want to spend the money to fixed the warped head
minor rust = the huge rust holes are less than 18 years old
Highway miles = really high mileage
low miles = because it hasn't run in 15 years, was recently fixed just enough to get it running and to sell it
One owner = but not one driver. Thrashed by the son, uncle, wife's brother, and anyone else who needed to borrow a car
needs minor work = not worth fixing, or I would have fixed it
 
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Hondaslayer

Adventurer
$1,500?

No.

Not even in the Pacific Northwest in good running condition is that worth $1,500.

Offer him $500. When he tries to get you come up offer $400. Walk away at $501.
 

calicamper

Expedition Leader
Miata buddy can get about $400 from the scrap yard for the left overs of stripped and parted out Miatas. So its probably worth about $400.

You need a vehicle that will get you from point A to B with as little drama as possible. If your budget is $1500 snoop around old people retirement housing areas and keep an eye out for grandma selling her Buick. I'm not kidding family member just picked one up a 96 Buick with 60,000 miles on it. $1500 clean its made two trips from CA to Montana already zero issues.

$1500 all that matters is that its in running shape who cares what it is or what it looks like. Good luck
 

letgonow

New member
We have an 85 GL 4wd, stick w/hi-lo. Had it since 86. About 250k on it, same engine, replaced the (clutch once), rebuilt carb twice, front CVs many times. It is the best car we have for snow, it has been wrecked into about 9 times, has taught 2 new drivers. Love it. That said - $1500 is way too much, maybe $500-800, depending. Keep in mind that while easy to work on, many parts aren't available new, and many junkyards don't keep these around.

It isn't fast, it doesn't get great mileage compared to newer vehicles, but if it meets your defined needs - go for it. You could probably find a whitewater kayaker to sell it to later. Never let it overheat.

more info here:

http://www.ultimatesubaru.org/forum/
 

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