Subaru Engine

10

Asked by GuruVBQ3Y Aug 18, 2018 at 10:17 AM about the 2007 Subaru Outback 2.5i Basic Wagon AWD

Question type: Maintenance & Repair

My husband’s Subaru Outback sucked a
valve into the engine and seized in March
2018. We replaced the engine with a “new
to us” engine with approx 30k miles on it.
Now, 5 months later, as he was driving
home the other day, it started driving really
rough and the oil light started flashing. He
pulled over, added oil, drove it straight to
the mechanic. They told him that he let the
engine run dry and it seized again. Prior to
the engine completely failing, no oil
pressure light came on, and it was running
better than it ever has. This is exactly what
happened in March as well. It was running
fine and then all of the sudden just died.
The shop is telling him that Subarus burn
through oil really fast and he must not have
been aware that he needed more oil. I think
it doesn’t add up and there must have
been something else going on to make it
burn through oil so fast. The fact that the
oil light never came on until his engine was
roast makes no sense to me. It is a well
respected shop, but I want to make sure
we aren’t being taken advantage of.

7 Answers

Never checking the oil level can do this. Your year Subaru is not known for excessive oil consumption but there are always exceptions.

10

We do check oil levels. Checking oil levels every day seems excessive and abnormal. If this was what needed to be done, the mechanic should have told us that. I feel like part of the responsibility lies on the mechanic for a)not checking that the oil pressure gauge worked before giving us the car back after replacing the engine and b) not mentioning to check oil levels constantly as a precautionary measure.

70

I also am going through a similar experience. I replace the entire engine block with a new Subaru engine less than 3 years ago, have been very regular on synthetic (ie expensive) oil changes and a rod just blew in the engine about a week after a recent oil change. How could this happen? I'm NEVER buying a Subaru again.

70

The oil light also never went on in my vehicle. The check engine light went on and the cruise control light flashed in both instances. The most recent time, I pulled over IMMEDIATELY and checked the oil, which was full. Who's at fault here? The mechanic who put in the engine, the folks who changed the oil, or Subaru for a faulty engine to start with? I think someone needs to take responsibility because an engine failing that's under 3 years old and has just over 30k miles on it is absolutely absurd! I also agree that checking oil levels every day is excessive and abnormal. I've been on the phone with Subaru several times and they have offered no help.

1 people found this helpful.
10

Yeah. The mechanics at the shop who worked on it said that older Subarus have given the Subaru brand a good name, but that newer models have different engines than the original ones and that those newer engines are crap. Not sure why they suggested replacing the engine in the first place if this was the case, but we will probably never own another Subaru because of this. (We use synthetic as well).

1 people found this helpful.
10

Yes!! That’s exactly what happened to us as well (the engine light and cruise control came in, but no oil light) with the original engine and then with the “new to us” engine that had around $30k miles on it. You live and you learn, I suppose.

Your Answer:

Outback

Looking for a Used Outback in your area?

CarGurus has 37,975 nationwide Outback listings starting at $750.

ZIP:

Own this car?

Share your experience with others.

2007 Subaru Outback

Review another car

CarGurus Experts

  • #1
    Mark Weiner
    Reputation
    33,230
  • #2
    TheSubaruGuruBoston
    Reputation
    28,320
  • #3
    Keith Cahalan
    Reputation
    3,310
View All

Know more, shop wisely

Search

Related Models For Sale

Used Subaru Forester
1,079 Great Deals out of 26,219 listings starting at $2,000
Used Toyota RAV4
1,864 Great Deals out of 27,942 listings starting at $1,350
Used Honda CR-V
1,994 Great Deals out of 41,068 listings starting at $1,100
Used Toyota 4Runner
1,230 Great Deals out of 18,341 listings starting at $1,800
Used Toyota Tacoma
1,838 Great Deals out of 31,130 listings starting at $2,295
Used Subaru Legacy
313 Great Deals out of 6,891 listings starting at $499
Used Toyota Highlander
1,238 Great Deals out of 17,686 listings starting at $675
Used Subaru Impreza
367 Great Deals out of 7,407 listings starting at $800
Used Toyota Camry
1,992 Great Deals out of 34,576 listings starting at $500
Used Honda Pilot
940 Great Deals out of 28,653 listings starting at $950
Used Honda Accord
1,505 Great Deals out of 28,825 listings starting at $500
Used Jeep Grand Cherokee
2,548 Great Deals out of 49,034 listings starting at $750

Used Cars for Sale

2024 Subaru Outback For Sale
131 Great Deals out of 24,607 listings starting at $27,000
2023 Subaru Outback For Sale
103 Great Deals out of 1,367 listings starting at $24,417
2022 Subaru Outback For Sale
98 Great Deals out of 1,731 listings starting at $18,986
2021 Subaru Outback For Sale
130 Great Deals out of 2,096 listings starting at $15,999
2020 Subaru Outback For Sale
122 Great Deals out of 1,391 listings starting at $15,988

Content submitted by Users is not endorsed by CarGurus, does not express the opinions of CarGurus, and should not be considered reviewed, screened, or approved by CarGurus. Please refer to CarGurus Terms of Use. Content will be removed if CarGurus becomes aware that it violates our policies.