Pecky
Forum Member
- Joined
- Aug 1, 2008
- Messages
- 71
- Location
- Perth - Western Australia
- Car Year
- 2016
- Car Model
- Forester - diesel
- Transmission
- CVT
Hi all,
I thought I would tell you of a fix for a problem I just had on my 2010 Forester diesel which has 124,000 km on the clock.
Driving along at 80/90 in 5th gear the car would start shuddering going up a slight incline. Backing off the throttle seemed to ease it and it was repeatable in similar circumstances. The fuel consumption had also started to get worse as well.
The fault was found to be a split on the inside radius of the hose between the intercooler and the throttle body. I tried taping it up with self fusing tape which stopped the shuddering but the car now made whistling noises, so obviously the tape had not totally sealed the split.
I needed a quick fix and didn't' have time for the genuine Subaru spare to be shipped in. So I got a 70mm internal diameter, 45 degree bend, silicone intake hose from a performance shop that fitted, but needed to be shortened a bit.
A $35 fix that worked. Better than a friend who paid over $700 for the genuine Subaru hose from his turbo, who had similar troubles and gave me some idea of where to look.
cheers
I thought I would tell you of a fix for a problem I just had on my 2010 Forester diesel which has 124,000 km on the clock.
Driving along at 80/90 in 5th gear the car would start shuddering going up a slight incline. Backing off the throttle seemed to ease it and it was repeatable in similar circumstances. The fuel consumption had also started to get worse as well.
The fault was found to be a split on the inside radius of the hose between the intercooler and the throttle body. I tried taping it up with self fusing tape which stopped the shuddering but the car now made whistling noises, so obviously the tape had not totally sealed the split.
I needed a quick fix and didn't' have time for the genuine Subaru spare to be shipped in. So I got a 70mm internal diameter, 45 degree bend, silicone intake hose from a performance shop that fitted, but needed to be shortened a bit.
A $35 fix that worked. Better than a friend who paid over $700 for the genuine Subaru hose from his turbo, who had similar troubles and gave me some idea of where to look.
cheers