A
amanda992004
between subaru (2005 LEGACY 2.5I SEDAN ) and toyota camry ( 2005 SE 4dr
Sedan OR LE 4dr Sedan), which one would you recommend?
Sedan OR LE 4dr Sedan), which one would you recommend?
between subaru (2005 LEGACY 2.5I SEDAN ) and toyota camry ( 2005 SE
4dr Sedan OR LE 4dr Sedan), which one would you recommend?
between subaru (2005 LEGACY 2.5I SEDAN ) and toyota camry ( 2005 SE 4dr
Sedan OR LE 4dr Sedan), which one would you recommend?
Why do you recommend the Legacy 4cyl, but not the H6?
Rick said:Hi,
What are you looking for? While these are both 4 door sedans, I think
the similarities start to fade quickly from there!
Do you NEED AWD? If so, there's no question. A lot of that depends on
where you're located. I'm in SoCal,
and have an older Subie that was
built when they were still 4wd (switchable.) In the 6 1/2 years and
150k+ miles I've put on it, the times it's been in 4wd cuz it was TRULY
needed can be counted on one hand. BUT, as the TV ads say, when those
times came it was "priceless." If you live in snow country, your
experience will be a whole different thing from mine! And, if you live
where you might see dirt roads, the Camry SE is not the car to have
unless you like the sound of stuff dragging the underside.
I'm not sure,
but I think the LE sits a little higher.
OTOH, there are fewer Subies made, sold and serviced here in the US than
Camries (forgetting that Toyota makes other cars & trucks, and a single
large and well-known Toyota dealer in the LA area probably sells as many
Toyotas in a year as all the Subie dealers in the whole state), so
the availability of parts and service stands in Toyota's favor.
Prices for
parts for either make are outrageous, but IME Toyota's parts pipeline is
something Subaru can only look at in awe.
Toyota's dealer service is no
bargain--I do all my own work on my Subie so I can't speak to dealer
service there, just parts.
Now, if you like the greater room and other "selling points" of the
Camry, I'd suggest you go with one of the 4 cyl models.
No, they don't
have the power of the V-6, but they also get FAR better fuel economy,
are much easier to work on, and should cost you less to maintain as a
result.
Okay.
Toyota's 4 cyl engines are historically more oil tight than
their V-6es, too. The V-6 shares one of Subie's shortcomings: almost all
oil leaks lead straight to the exhaust system with attendant smoke and
smells, and trust me, their V-6es DO leak! A good home wrench can pretty
much take care of a 4 cyl--the V-6 is an exercise in frustration.
BTW, I also own an earlier V-6 Camry SE in addition to my Subie, so I
have no particular flag to wave here. They're different cars that serve
different needs IMO.
Rick
I am in Northern California - not San Francisco or Bay area - where it
gets quite hot in the summer. I will never live in really cold plcaes
(snowy places) like Colorado.
I see. I can't see myself to be living in the area with dirt road int
he near future, in fact, probaby never.
I have heard about that.
Good to know.
I do prefer greater room.
Oil leak is something I'd be scared off. Thanks for letting me know.
It seems that living in Sacramento, Camry would be less costly
maintencance- wise, am I right?
I am in Northern California - not San Francisco or Bay area - where it
gets quite hot in the summer. I will never live in really cold plcaes
(snowy places) like Colorado.
I see. I can't see myself to be living in the area with dirt road int
he near future, in fact, probaby never.
I have heard about that.
Good to know.
I do prefer greater room.
Oil leak is something I'd be scared off. Thanks for letting me know.
It seems that living in Sacramento, Camry would be less costly
maintencance- wise, am I right?
I saw in an auto-show a manual H6 subaru... looked real nice.
Is the tranny really such the power sucker?
(btw, what is a "true slush bucket"?)
There is NO comparsion between Subaru and Toyota when it comes to
reliability, costs and long term investment.
Bonehenge said:Toyota has taken reliability and owner serviceability to the point of
boredom. I find Toyotas to be the most user serviceable going. My
Earle said:My two cents: Take a look at the '05 Toyota Prius. It gets about
48 MPG compared to around 24 for the Camry or Subaru. The Prius
battery and in fact, the whole electric drive train, is guaranteed
(in California) for 150,000 miles and ten years. In addition, there
is a $2,000 federal tax deduction if you buy it this year.
And then there's ozone... every electric motor in the universe emits
ozone. Smog people like to tell us ground based ozone is one of our
biggest problems. So what are we gonna do with the ozone produced by
hybrid motors, "bag it up" and use it to go patch the hole in the ozone
layer over Antarctica?
Oh, yeah, who's liable in the first really ugly accident involving a
hybrid where the batteries break open and burn the bejabbers out of a
victim who may be trapped in the car but not necessarily that badly
injured before the battery gets him? I could probably think of some more
issues if I tried.
So, hybrids may have a future, and my "concerns" may be pure nonsense.
But let's revisit this issue five or ten years down the line and see if
I struck out completely? Devil's advocate mode "off."
Rick
bicycle(Mr. R. White) said:Sorry dude, but your WRONG there. Not ALL electric motors emit ozone. DC
motors have a commutator/brush set up that DOES arc and produce Ozone.
However AC motors DO NOT. Even the traction motors on Diesel-Electric
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