subaru l series help
- l series mad
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subaru l series help
whats the proper way to ingage 4wd in a l series dual range 4wd
- RSR 555
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Firstly, make sure the car is on loose surface (sand, snow, gravel, etc...), then depending on the model (early or late) push the 4WD lever forward, one click (or press the button in the centre of the gear knob) whilst either stopped or doing under 30km/h.. hey presto, you're in 4WD 
When selecting low range (pushing the 4WD level forward again - second click)then you're in low range. Please ensure the car is not moving.
There are lots of other ways (but more risky) that you select 4WD but that is the general way to select it.

When selecting low range (pushing the 4WD level forward again - second click)then you're in low range. Please ensure the car is not moving.
There are lots of other ways (but more risky) that you select 4WD but that is the general way to select it.
You know you are getting old when the candles on your birthday cake start to cost more than the cake itself.
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- Silverbullet
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- FROG
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Warranty has expired on these models Silverbullet , you are better off listening to Paul and Bantum these days 

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You guys know it was called 'shift on the fly' (at least in the US) for a reason right?
You do not have to use the clutch and according to my old '78 wagon's sticker you can put it in 4wd below 80 Km per hour... (But in those days you had to point the wheels straight!). So, no you do not have to stop nor be under 30 Km an hour... Of course 4wd lo is another matter...
You do not have to use the clutch and according to my old '78 wagon's sticker you can put it in 4wd below 80 Km per hour... (But in those days you had to point the wheels straight!). So, no you do not have to stop nor be under 30 Km an hour... Of course 4wd lo is another matter...
Old Boxer Tricks
1980 Brumby
1978 4WD Station Wagon
1974 DL Sedan
1974 GSR Coupe
1980 Brumby
1978 4WD Station Wagon
1974 DL Sedan
1974 GSR Coupe
- l series mad
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- El_Freddo
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For Noobs maybe...RSR 555 wrote:Firstly, make sure the car is on loose surface (sand, snow, gravel, etc...), then depending on the model (early or late) push the 4WD lever forward, one click (or press the button in the centre of the gear knob) whilst either stopped or doing under 30km/h.. hey presto, you're in 4WD
Yeah at any speed in a straight line without a load on the drivetrain and you can select HIGH 4wd. I do it all the time and with the rain around here I've been (naughtily) using 4wd in the wet for acceleration and traction purposes.sublime wrote:You guys know it was called 'shift on the fly' (at least in the US) for a reason right?
You do not have to use the clutch and according to my old '78 wagon's sticker you can put it in 4wd below 80 Km per hour... (But in those days you had to point the wheels straight!). So, no you do not have to stop nor be under 30 Km an hour... Of course 4wd lo is another matter...
Because if there was any issues with wear on it you wouldn't be able to engage 4wd. Slotting it in 4wd on the fly is no issue if you've got the same diff ratios front and rear and you've got the same sized tyres on all round.Davidov wrote:Why put unneccesary wear on it when it could be avoided?
I also find it easier to disengage 4wd on the fly too - more wheel rotations to the time I'm pushing on the 4wd lever to make the action easier too (in general), again must be in a straight line unless trying to work out which way to be turning to undo the bind in the system that can be there.
My 5c.
Cheers
Bennie
- l series mad
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Well Bennie's has over 500,000km I think but it is EJ now and has been for a few years. Usually a good few hundred km with most stuff stock if looked after. My old $300 L-Series seemed more reliable than my current Forester. lol I regret selling it! That only had a low 230,000km with everything original and ran like a dream for the most partl series mad wrote:an how much kilometers can these l series with ea82 mpfi do ?

I used to change mine on the fly like Bennie does, never seemed to be an issue. Even used it a few times in the wet onroad, although I probably shouldn't off. But on a hill with the stock skinny 13" wheels it had almost no traction..
- steptoe
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STOP to shift ?
From 2WD to 4WD and back again on a few L series 5 speeds ~ 100 kph with clutch, also used to do without on non tar. The old L EA82's will do as many as they can but as they age, like most cars, their owners, or next owner tends not to service them as if they are new and want to keep their $1000 car just that, so unfortunately not a lot get beyond mid 300,000kms. It is usually cheaper oil, extended service intervals, recycled oil filter and ageing cooling system that lets them down.

- Bantum
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Clarification ...
Yeah that was what I was thinking ...sublime wrote:You guys know it was called 'shift on the fly' (at least in the US) for a reason right?
You do not have to use the clutch and according to my old '78 wagon's sticker you can put it in 4wd below 80 Km per hour... (But in those days you had to point the wheels straight!). So, no you do not have to stop nor be under 30 Km an hour... Of course 4wd lo is another matter...

In the Brumby you can go pretty much straight into 4wd Hi in any gear.
However to go into 4wd low, you have slow down to almost a 'crawl' to engage. ...

- RSR 555
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Very hard to answer but if well maintained then I'd say an average of around 400,000kms.l series mad wrote:an how much kilometers can these l series with ea82 mpfi do ?
As for 'Shifting on the Fly' I wouldn't recommend it if you are new to Subarus. I do it from time to time myself but I'm very gentle on the change. Like I said on my first response, there is many ways to shift into 4WD but my reply was playing it safe.
You know you are getting old when the candles on your birthday cake start to cost more than the cake itself.
RSR Performance
Home of the 'MURTAYA' in Oz
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Disclaimer: Not my website but hyperlink here to Subaru workshop manuals
RSR Performance
Home of the 'MURTAYA' in Oz
Subaru Impreza WRX based Sportscar
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
Disclaimer: Not my website but hyperlink here to Subaru workshop manuals
- El_Freddo
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470k km on the clock, but there's 10k "missing" when the speedo cable wasn't connected and in the last 20k km that I've been running on the big tyres it's missing 18% of the distance travelled in that time. So it's probably really really close! Can't wait!taza wrote:Well Bennie's has over 500,000km I think but it is EJ now and has been for a few years.
I've heard of a one owner L series going for 450k km without even a head gasket change (Beigewagon on ORS). The L will go the distance asked of it if you don't abuse it and you look after it!taza wrote:Usually a good few hundred km with most stuff stock if looked after.
You don't *have to* slow down for low range - just need to know what driving gear you need to engage to match your speed to the low range which is where it all gets technical. And that has to be under 70km/h which is pretty much the top speed in low range...Bantum wrote:Yeah that was what I was thinking ...![]()
In the Brumby you can go pretty much straight into 4wd Hi in any gear.
However to go into 4wd low, you have slow down to almost a 'crawl' to engage. ...
Cheers
Bennie
- l series mad
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- l series mad
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- Location: wa