2002 Subaru Impreza Wrx Sedan 4-door 2.0l on 2040-cars
Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States
I am selling my 2002 Subaru WRX. It has a ton of work done. Moved to Colorado
from Georgia and out there on a 93 octane tune put down 294 WHP and 281
lbs of torque. I am running an OTS map here currently for 91 octane and
it runs fine but would get much more power with a protune.
It has 170k miles on the chassis. 60k miles or so on the 2005 WRX 5-speed transmission. Had brand new EJ205 2.0L OEM short block (not a used or rebuilt block), heads, STI TMIC, IHI VF34 turbo, 565cc Deatschwerks injectors, fuel pump put in 12k miles ago. All items installed then were brand new and broke in the engine for 1k miles not building more than 5 lbs of boost nor exceeding 3 rpms. I have put nothing but Subaru full synthetic 5w-30 oil in it and have never gone more than 2500 miles without an oil change. Total cost ran me around $8000. By the way the old engine did not throw a rod or anything like that just found out soon after buying the car that a rod bearing was going out so replaced everything. Had the rear differential rebuild 500 miles ago and put in a Cusco 1.5 way 60% lock limited slip differential. Still handles well in the snow. This was about a $2800 job. I have just over 15k miles on the tires and the tread still is looking good. Have about 7k miles on exceedy oem clutch and ACT streetlite lightened flywheel. Replaced one of the wheel bearings and the AC compressor a few thousand miles ago. Heater and AC work well. List of performance parts in addition to the above: Mishimoto radiator SPT CAI SPT cat back exhuast no name downpipe Cobb 3 port Boost Control Solenoid rear upper and front upper and lower sway bars Tein lowering springs Perrin lightened crank pully SPT short shifter Stoptech Sport Brake kit (stainless steel brake lines, power slot rotors and performance street pads which are not noisy at all) PIONEER AVH-P4400BH which I have also setup with a PS2 Wired up for subs and have a box with two 12s and an amp in the trunk APEXI turbo timer Cobb V2 Access port The keyless entry and alarm work Roof wrapped with carbon fiber vinyl The bad: Could use a tune if in an area with 91 octane gas for best results Body has some scratches and scuffs Front bumper is scratched up and needs to be replaced due to a poor tow truck driver Right front fender has been brushed up against by someone while it was parked It used to have an STI wing which I removed and so the trunk has some holes in it which is why I wrapped it Interior has some scruffs and scratches and the driver seat has a tare in it I purchased the car July 2012 and believe to be the 7th owner The car runs great and is super fun to drive. Yes the car has some cosmetic issues but I have never been in an accident and the title is clean and clear. Send me an email with your contact info and any questions. I have most all of the records from the parts I have purchased and records from the work that has been done. The car has never been tracked and I do not drive it hard. Most of the miles on her are all highway. Also a non-smoker car and adult driven This is for local pick-up, $500 due at auction end and the remaining due within 7 days from auction end in the form of cash in person or certified payment option. No pay-pal for final payment. |
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Junkyard Gem: 1996 Subaru SVX LSi
Mon, Feb 12 2018Even as Subaru nailed down its position as the world's top maker of sensible all-wheel-drive cars, the company was willing to take a chance with a big, expensive sporty car with science-fiction looks. That car was the SVX, built for the 1992 through 1996 model years. Here's a final-model-year SVX, spotted in a Denver-area self-service wrecking yard. Because I live in Colorado, where just about everyone— myself included— owns at least one Subaru, discarded SVXs aren't so rare in my local wrecking yards. Before today's car, I have photographed this '92, this '93, this '95, and this '96. Unlike their XT and XT6 predecessors, the SVX had no manual transmission option; its big 3.3-liter boxer six engine made too much power for the three-pedal hardware Subaru had on hand. Those four-speed automatics were quite failure-prone, but this car's career was cut short by an ordinary wreck and not a bad slushbox. Subaru didn't make another engine this big until more than a decade later, with the 3.6 in the Tribeca. In 1996, this naturally-aspirated H6 was rated at 230 horsepower. Front-wheel-drive SVXs were available for a few years in the United States, but all of the '96s had all-wheel-drive. With all the horror stories about the transmission failures in these cars, 151,311 miles counts as an impressive mileage figure on an SVX. This car's owner or owners took good care of it. Well-cared-for older cars in wrecking yards often have the original owner's manual inside. Sometimes they even have the original window sticker stashed in the glovebox. This content is hosted by a third party. To view it, please update your privacy preferences. Manage Settings. The Alcyone SVX (as it was known in its Japanese homeland) featured this dreamlike TV commercial featuring a cover of Hedy West's 500 Miles. Featured Gallery Junked 1996 Subaru SVX View 19 Photos Auto News Subaru Coupe Luxury Performance Classics subaru svx
2015 Subaru WRX
Mon, 16 Dec 2013Every time I drive a Subaru WRX, I wish one of my parents had taken some weird, top-secret spy job that would have forced us to relocate to Finland when I was a kid. I could have learned the art of rally-style car control as a young lad, and in my adult life, sought out a dangerous/rewarding/awesome career as a professional WRC driver.
Never was that more clear than on the launch program for the new 2015 WRX, where Subaru pointed us down a long, somewhat treacherous stretch of road in the tree-lined mountains of northern California. Quick elevation changes were met with blind turns and washed-out shoulders, not to mention rogue bits of snow, ice and gravel that lined the apexes of nearly every turn. Here, I couldn't stop grinning, my co-driver and I switching between second and third gears, with precise steering inputs and judicious braking keeping us safely on the road and not plummeting nose-first into the trees. And the WRX simply devoured each inch of pavement with a ferocious poise that made me remember why I have loved this car so darn much.
But this sort of 100 Acre Wood perfection isn't the only way to experience Subaru's darling WRX. After a long stint of driving back down the California coast on Highway 1, I realized that Subaru's line about this being the best-driving WRX yet wasn't just a bunch of PR mumbo-jumbo. Of course, it isn't without a few compromises...
2013 Subaru WRX STI Special Edition
Wed, 05 Jun 2013Despite my best efforts to convince myself otherwise, I think I'm finally getting too old for this car. I remember the days when I would go ga-ga over the winged Subaru WRX STI sedan, my inner boy racer caring only about its turbo thrills and not taking into account things like price, packaging or interior quality/comfort. Even now, as someone who generally appreciates offbeat color choices, I'm having a hard time getting behind the Tangerine Orange paint of this Special Edition tester, a unique version of the STI sedan limited to just 100 cars. (West Coast Editor Michael Harley recently spent time in the Special Edition WRX sedan, which will see a production run of 200 units.)
To give it The Full Halloween, this limited-edition Subie comes with black accents on its mirrors and fender badges, not to mention black alloy wheels and special graphics on the rocker panels. Special Edition cars also come standard with foglights, and there are orange accents found throughout the interior. All in, this flashier Subaru will set you back $34,795 plus $700 for destination, or $500 more than the standard version.
No, $35,000 isn't chump change, and many will argue that there are far better vehicles to be had at that exact same price point. And while my aging brain is beginning to think more toward that side of the rational thought spectrum, there's still a lot about this car that makes my more youthful self endlessly happy.