Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

Subaru: Wrx Sti on 2040-cars

US $19,000.00
Year:2006 Mileage:15700 Color: Silver
Location:

Orient, Iowa, United States

Orient, Iowa, United States
Advertising:

If you have any questions about this please feel free to contact me via e-mail : thomasdeeprunk@yahoo.com

engine build je forged pistons manley I beam rods acl bearings ported heads 1mm oversize valves gsc s2 272 cams super dampener crank pulley custom exhaust and intercooler pipe with precision 3076r top feed converted with fic1650cc injectors 450lph pump tial blow off valve and wastegate aem boost fuel pressure and air fuel gauges cobb v3 tuned by graham on e85 drive train stainless steel brake lines locking subframe bolts locking rear dif bar kartboy short shifter cusco engine and trans mounts almost every other bushing replaced with whiteline solid bushings drive shaft shop one piece drive shaft drive shaft shop 800whp rerar axles and 750whp front

Auto Services in Iowa

Toyota Of Des Moines ★★★★★

New Car Dealers
Address: 4515 Merle Hay Rd, Ankeny
Phone: (515) 276-1053

Road Runner Auto Sales and Service ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Used Car Dealers, Wholesale Used Car Dealers
Address: 2100 16th Avenue SW, Newhall
Phone: (319) 265-2100

Mysak Transmission ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Auto Transmission
Address: 4601 Highway 151, Marion
Phone: (319) 447-9430

Michael`s Automotive Authority ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting
Address: 1002 W 2nd Ave, Ackworth
Phone: (515) 961-6666

Heartland Restoration and Towing ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Towing
Address: 33124 Ute Ave, Booneville
Phone: (515) 987-1148

Fast Action Towing & Recovery ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Towing, Tire Changing Equipment
Address: Ankeny
Phone: (515) 314-5528

Auto blog

Junkyard Gem: 1992 Subaru SVX

Wed, Jul 20 2016

Subaru is doing quite well these days with its formula of selling a combination of sensible pavement-optional commuters and rally-inspired performance cars, but go back a quarter-century or so and many of the cars with the Pleiades badges were known more for futuristic jet-fighter-style cockpits and weird gadgetry. This philosophy reached its peak with the brilliant, bizarre Subaru SVX, sold in North America for the 1992 through 1995 model years. Here's a well-preserved purple SVX I spotted a few days ago in a Denver self-service yard. Just look at the side glass! It's impossible to not love the way this car looks. The design of the SVX's exterior was the creation of Giorgetto Giugiaro. The SVX had a DOHC flat-six displacing 3.3 liters, the largest street engine Subaru had built up to that point. It made 231 horsepower, which was respectable for the era. Unfortunately, Subaru didn't have a manual transmission that could handle that kind of engine power, so every SVX came with a four-speed automatic... which (in addition to being way less fun than a manual) also couldn't handle the EG33's output. For this reason, you see SVXs in fairly decent condition at junkyards all the time; a good-running, clean example is worth good money, but one with a bad transmission is worth its weight in scrap. Related Video:

2015 Subaru Forester tS Quick Spin

Mon, Apr 6 2015

When Subaru invited me to Japan and the famed Suzuka racing circuit to drive its BRZ tS, there was more on the menu than sporting coupes. The STI buffet also included the Subaru Forester tS. If you caught my BRZ tS review, the Forester follows the same idea: modified for better, more precise handling but without any increase in power. As I shared in the first tS review, and with Subaru's news at the New York Auto Show, the company plans to increase the awareness of Subaru Tecnica International – STI – over the next five years. In the case of the BRZ tS, a similarly-conceived car is coming to the US in the next few years. Such is not the story with the Forester tS. The JDM-only product was on hand to drive as further proof of what STI can do, but not as a preview to an upcoming model for sale in America. Subaru execs wouldn't go so far as to rule the idea out completely, but there was plenty of wink-nudging admitting the limited market for something like the Forester tS over here. Firmly ensconced in the "forbidden fruit" category, then, I still thought it'd be fun to report on the hot-ish, wagon-ish Forester. This one's for the other car nerds like me. Driving Notes So, what's new on this tS? Basically STI made the Forester stickier and less prone to roll under high cornering load. The same type of flexible tower brace previously found under the hood of the WRX is used here, and "flexible draw stiffeners" connect the body to the front and rear subframes for added body stiffness. The braces incorporate a very strong coil spring, and add lateral stiffness with enough give to allow the tires to stay in perfect contact with the road surface. The tires in question are 245-section Bridgestones, riding on attractive 19-inch STI wheels, both increases from the 225-section tires and 18-inch wheels that come standard in the US on the Forester 2.0XT model. The tS also has a more-powerful Brembo braking package; handy when hauling a 3,600-pound vehicle down from straightaway speeds. Subaru benchmarked the tS versus other 'sporty' SUVs and CUVs, including out and out performance variants. (Japanese professional modesty prevented Subaru reps from naming specific names, but suffice it to say that the Germans were involved.) In terms of roll rates, yaw response, slalom time, g-force and more, the Subaru's tS package shows massive improvements versus the standard Forester, and holds up to the competitive targets too.

Subaru Impreza shows off 360-degree passing technique

Mon, 04 Mar 2013

Leave it to a Subaru WRX to find a new way to improve the art of passing. This dash cam vid shows a white WRX pirouetting past our recording car and somehow straightening out before either sliding off the road or slamming into the car ahead. If this were a standard move in rally racing, the WRC would be bigger than NASCAR.
Like most dash cam vids, we don't know where it was shot (Russia's always a good bet) or what the circumstances were (did the driver spin on purpose or was the 360-degree slide accidental?), but the remarkable feat was caught on camera and uploaded to YouTube, preserving it for an Internet eternity. Scroll below to watch the twist yourself, and don't try this at home!