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Friday, February 17, 2012

First Entry - 2003 Subaru Forester XS

This is simply a maintenance record for my 2003 Subaru Forester XS (US market version).  This first post will summarize the history of my Forester up to the date that I am starting this blog.  Hopefully it will prove useful to others with SG chassis (2003-2008) Subaru Foresters.
~106,000 Miles: Timing Belt Change

The Subaru recommended timing belt (cam belt) change interval on the normally aspirated SOHC 2.5L 4-cylinder EJ25 engine is 105,000 miles.  Part of paying the low price for the car was knowing that I was going to have to change the timing belt.

So I searched out the details on the internet (mostly from www.SubaruForester.org) and from my copy of the Chilton Manual and discovered that it wasn't that big of a deal to do.  So I bought a full front of engine overhaul kit from a great source on eBay (it was all name brand parts from GKN, Continental, etc.) that included all new cam seals, front crank seal, new timing belt, new idler pulleys, new tensioner, and new waterpump.  All nice quality stuff for a great price.

~99,000 Miles: My New (Used) Forester

I purchasedmy Forester used from a dealer in Reading, PA in September of 2010.  I was purposely looking for a 2003-2005 Forester with a 5-speed manual transaxle to replace my 2002 WRX that I had sold the year before.  I was hoping for a car with under 100,000 miles on the odometer, no accident history, and a gray interior (I can't stand beige interiors on cars).  More importantly, I wanted one that was reasonably maintained to begin with with.  I was not concerned about exterior color or overall appearance.

This car was the perfect match for my criteria.  99,000 miles on the clock, gray interior, and in very good mechanical order.  The dealer took it in trade from the original owner as a favor and did not want it on their lot which primarly focused on newer used European cars (mostly BMW).  So they were unloading it as-is for $6,500.  Perfect for me.

The interior was perfect except for wear on the driver's side carpet.  I don't think anyone had ever sat in the passenger seats over it's life.  The exterior was completely rust free (gotta love southern PA, no road salt) but had all kinds of dents and dings on the passenger side.  I suspect it was an older driver as most of the damage looked like it was from running into the side of a garage, or things falling over on it.  All in all, it was a steal.

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