Just wanted to share the story of how I learned my lesson and how my love for Subaru has greatly diminished.
Last summer I embarked on a long road trip in my 2002 WRX Wagon to help a friend pick up a new daily driver (a 2004 Forester XT ironically). A little bit into the trip there, by WRX had a blowout. Being a long towing distance from home, I contemplated my options. The best seemed to be to toss on the donut and hobble the car to the nearest tire store and just have the tire replaced and continue on our way. Logic was telling me that if it was supplied with the car, it should be atleast usable short term... I also checked the owners manual, which only listed a warning about speed.
The nearest tire store was a good distance away, so we putzed it there off the highway. Eventually, I could smell gear oil and then noticed smoke coming from the rear shortly before we got to the store. We let it cool down for a little bit then got to the tire place. This is where the "costs" start up. The tire store REFUSED to just change the one tire with the car at the store. The other three tires were going to be due for a change in the near future, so I caved and bought a new set. The tire store was not busy at all, but somehow it took 5/6 hours to finally get the tires on. I also had them check the diff fluid, which not surprisingly was pitch black. After leaving the tire store, we snagged a quart of gear oil and did a quick swap. The diff was a bit whiney, but the car felt fine. We ended up having to wait till the next weekend to get the other car. COSTs: Tires - around $550, diff fluid - $2X, and an entire Saturday.
The diff was slightly audible, but everything functioned fine and I figured I'd swap the diff down the road. Once any trace of winter was gone, I took the car off the road to do some needed maintenance and repairs. I started the work and the search for a used diff, but another project followed by a tree going through my garage roof derailed both. After finishing and enjoying the other project car, I decided that I wanted to get rid of the WRX to further fund it. Figuring that the noisy diff would deter potential buyers, I set out to find a used diff. I (VERY WRONGLY) figured this would be the only investment into making the car sale worthy... I couldn't find a diff nearby, so I had to settle for one a little bit of a distance away. COST: diff - $150, a good bit of gas in my thirsty pick up, and eventually some time because the wiper linkage in the truck came apart during the trip...
Figuring that it would be a simple swap, I set out to change the diff. I did a small ammount of HW and found a write up that explained how to remove the diff without pulling the axle from the hub. All you had to do was remove this big long bolt that connects the lateral link and trailing arm to the knuckle and you can free the axle from the diff. Awesome, except that must only work on Subaru's from Florida, with 50k on them... After unloading every kind of penetrating snake oil I could find on it, the bolt broke. That's how I discovered over 180k miles and 12/13 Michigan winters had fused the knuckle, bolt and bearing sleeves into one piece. Awesome. No amount of oils, heat, hammering etc. could work anything free. I ended up cutting through the bolt, which probably trashed knuckle, which doesn't really matter because the remnants of the bolt that are in it won't come out. The ABS sensor is also stuck. Looks like both will need to be replaced, along with the bolt and bushings. The axle was in good shape, so I figured I'd try to salvage that. Nope, nothing will break it free from the hub, and the threads are trashed from hammering on the nut to keep the shaft from getting mushroomed.
Looks like I now need the bolt/nut/washers, two bushings, a knuckle, an ABS sensor, an axle and atleast one wheel stud. Luckily with this axle out, I'll be able to drop the diff and pull the other axle without doing all of this crap on the other side... I haven't bought everything yet, but COST (so far): bushings/bolt/washers/nut - $90 (WTF), an entire bottle of Kroil, multiple bottles of PB Blaster, Acetone, ATF, multiple packs of cigarettes and cans of Milwaukee's Best, probably what amounts to days of time hammering on things, and some adverse side effects probably from breathing in rubber smoke and acetone fumes.
Just hunting around, looks like the other parts will easily total over $200. I also have front axles I want to swap in, but I'm having second thoughts. Believe it or not, I used to complain about working on DSM's.
To top it off, the Forester XT my buddy and I were going to pick up on that fateful day ended up being a huge headache for my buddy. After nine months and countless major failures, he gave up on it. Luckily, he was able to pawn it off for a huge gain on a buyer that completely ignored white smoke coming from the exhaust that we suspected was a headgasket...
I hate Subarus now.