I've been meaning to post on this forum for like the past two years, so here's my lifted Impreza build to date. I bought this car (2000 Impreza Outback Sport wagon) like two years ago after pretty much designing the whole car. It's actually pretty close to the original design still, but I have a good bit of work left.
First, I stripped everything but the dash and some of the drivetrain. I sanded and resprayed the entire car, covering the interior floor and part of the exterior with truck bedliner, which is decently thick and pretty grippy. Looking back, Line-x may have been a better decision, but that costs actual money and who here has that?
Next, I installed mostly 03-05 Forester suspension, including struts, which are 3" longer than stock Impreza, and Forester front control arms, which increase track width and allow non-positive camber. I also installed King Springs, which are stiffer and about an inch taller than stock Forester springs, contributing to a total lift of around 4". I swapped rear hubs for disc brakes, which was super easy, out of a Legacy Outback (I think ~'98) as well as trailing arms, which are longer. I also installed Whiteline rear lateral links to solve the positive camber issue in the rear. The entire drivetrain was dropped 1.125", which helps keep axle angles to a minimum. The subframes were dropped via spacers from the Legacy Outback and everything else (transverse link on front control arm, driveshaft center support bearing, trailing arm front mounts) was lifted with aluminum spacers I made.
The last few pictures were from my first big trip in the Subaru. The goal was to make it to Asheville from Atlanta, but after a day or two there we decided to see how far we could get. We made it all the way to Louisville and then came back to Atlanta. An entire trip with no broken parts or catastrophes!
A few months later and after breaking my first axle, we took Suba on another road trip in the winter around North Carolina. I drove the Subaru in snow for the first time and made it home again in one piece.
At some point, I also took the Subaru on an offroading trip with MtnRoo Southeast, which is an offroad Subaru club. They started out West and there are different ones all over the country. We went to Tray Mountain near Helen, Georgia.
As of today, I've driven about 20k miles and the suspension is fine. I had to grind front and rear fenders to fit the tyres, which are 29" BFG All-Terrains (225/75R15). The tyres are fantastic. They have great grip on the road and even better offroad. Highly reccomend. Apart from that, I've built engine and diff skids as well as a front bumper that's definitely going to be rebuilt soon. I also installed Hella halogen fog lights on the front bumper as well as a 20" light bar on the front and two little LED pods in the rear bumper. I highly recommend cheap Amazon light bars as long as you pop them open and add a little silicon or something to waterproof them.
Yes, that is a semi-sketchy fuse/relay box tied to the trans tunnel:
After all this work, we took the Suba on a spring break roadtrip. The goal was to get to Colorado or something to the left of Atlanta. Day 1 brought us to the middle of nowhere, Tennessee, where an axle popped out of the inner CV. Definitely not ideal.
Day 2 brought us into Kansas, where a wheel bearing busted and started making noise, forcing us to drive through the West half of Kansas at a rate of about 45 mph. If you've ever driven through Kansas, you know how hellish this is. We made it to Denver early in the morning and SubaPerformance helped us swap in a new wheel bearing I got from the junkyard and got us on our way. They're super nice people. Highly recommend.
After a day or two driving through mountains in Colorado, we decided to take Suba out to Moab, Utah, where we attempted the White Rim Trail. Suba did pretty well. While I like the stiffer suspension because it's really hard to bottom out on anything, it isn't exactly comfortable on washboard-type terrain. Nevertheless, it did really well until a brake line snapped. Semi non-ideal. We drive back ~55 miles in first gear with a mostly non-existant e-brake and replaced the brake line at an O'Reilly's.
We departed Moab and drove South into New Mexico, where we were greeted by a blizzard. We drove East all the way back to Atlanta over the next few days with no complications apart from a semi-wiggly CV joint.
After this trip, I realized my main axle problem, apart from the angle, was the fact that my exhaust runs right below the front right inner CV joint. On long trips with lots of throttle, heat builds up and makes the rubber cv boot brittle, which eventually ruptures and spills out all its grease. After the remainder of grease burns up, the CV joint seizes up, and, in the case of what happened in Tennessee, spits an axle.
Here's my flickr album, which is way more detailed.