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We found the following complaints for SUBARU OUTBACK (2005)

Read complaints for SUBARU OUTBACK (2005)


Takata recallwe called in may 2016 and were put on a "list" and told it would be 7-8 weeks. We were told not to have anyone sit in the passenger seat of our car, rendering it fairly useless. Now it is november, more than 6 months and we are still on the list and repair is still quoted at 2 months.

Subaru recall wqr-53, called local dealership and was told it is on extreme back order would like to request a loaner vehicle as the potential for metal fragments striking a passenger riding in the passenger side could result in serious injury or death.

2005 subaru outback, consumer writes in regards to airbag safety recall. *ldthe consumer stated the airbag recall was performed on the vehicle, but continued to receive letters concerning the recall. The consumer believed the letters to be a scam.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback.the contact stated that he had experienced a failure related the manufacturer's takata air bag recall. The specifics of the failure experienced were not available. The contact stated that the vin was not included in the manufacturer's takata air bag recall. The approximate failure mileage was 70,000.

Takata recall. The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact received notification of nhtsa campaign number: 15v323000 (air bags); however, the parts to do the repair were unavailable. The contact stated that the manufacturer exceeded a reasonable amount of time for the recall repair. The dealer (cole subaru, rt 460 green valley suite 4, bluefield, wv 24701 (304) 305-4090) was contacted and confirmed that the parts were not available for the recall remedy. Two months ago, the dealer stated that they would order the parts and contact her once the parts arrived. The manufacturer was not made aware of the issue. The contact received a postcard from tk holdings, alerting her that they failed for bankruptcy. The contact had not experienced a failure. Parts distribution disconnect.

On july 13, 2005 i totaled my 2005 subaru outback by rolling it about three times.none of the airbags deployed-not even the side curtain airbags.i understand that the side curtain airbags are designed to deploy in a roll over.

Takata recall. The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact received notification of nhtsa campaign number: 15v323000 (air bags); however, the part to do the repair was unavailable. The contact stated that the manufacturer exceeded a reasonable amount of time for the recall repair. The manufacturer was made aware of the issue. The contact had not experienced a failure.

Takata recall. The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact received notification of nhtsa campaign number: 15v323000 (air bags); however, the parts to do the repair were unavailable. The contact stated that the manufacturer exceeded a reasonable amount of time for the recall repair. The manufacturer was not notified. The contact had not experienced a failure. Parts distribution disconnect.

Takata recall. The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact received notification for nhtsa campaign number: 15v323000 (air bags). However, the parts needed were not available for repairs. The contact believed that the manufacturer had exceeded a reasonable of time to provide the repairs. The dealer was contacted, who confirmed that the parts were not available. The manufacturer was not made aware of the delay. The contact had not experienced a failure. Vin tools confirms parts not available.

The contact owned a 2005 subaru outback. While driving at 25 mph, the driver side air bag deployed. As a result the contact sustained a burn to the right arm that required medical attention. The vehicle was destroyed. The manufacturer was not made aware of the failure. The failure mileage was 60,000. Updated 06/02/17*lj updated 10/17/2017

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact received notification of nhtsa campaign number: 15v323000 (air bags); however, the part to do the repair was unavailable. The contact stated that the manufacturer exceeded a reasonable amount of time for the recall repair. The manufacturer was made aware of the issue. The contact had not experienced a failure....updated04/04/16

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact received notification of nhtsa campaign number: 15v323000 (air bags); however, the part to do the repair was unavailable. The contact stated that the manufacturer exceeded a reasonable amount of time for the recall repair. The manufacturer was made aware of the issue. The contact had not experienced a failure. Parts distribution disconnect.

Takata recall - i have children and my subaru dealer is telling me i am not in a high priority group to have my airbag inflators replaced. I got a notice saying people should not ride in my passenger seat until it is fixed, but this is an impossible scenario for many people including myself and my family.

Takata recall. The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact received notification of nhtsa campaign number: 16v323000 (air bags); however, the parts to do the repair were unavailable. The contact stated that the manufacturer exceeded a reasonable amount of time for the recall repair. The manufacturer was notified of the issue. The contact had not experienced a failure. Parts distribution disconnect.

Nhtsa recall 15v-323.subaru notified me of this recall.they suggested no one sit in the passenger seat until the problem is repaired. But they are out of parts and don't know when it can be fixed.in a front or passenger side impact, the passenger air bag could still inflate, without a passenger, thus placing the driver at risk. So what do i do?stop driving the car until subaru fixes the problem? what can nhtsa do to make subaru fix the problem asap?

Takata recall

Takata recall. The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact stated that the recall notice for nhtsa campaign number: 15v323000 (air bags) was received in december of 2015. After contacting the dealer and the manufacturer on multiple occasions, the contact was informed that the parts needed for the recall remedy were still not available and no estimated time for receiving the parts could be provided. The contact had not experienced a failure. Parts distribution disconnect.

Takata recall:i have been waiting almost 1 1/2 months for the dealership to contact me about this recall!i called them the day i received the notice and was told that the parts were on backorder!my daughter drives this vehicle and is very concerned about driving it without the recall being done.she won't allow anyone to ride with her.how is it that my daughter acts so responsible but the manufacturer and oem dealer won't!when i call the dealer, their entry level receptionist won't even allow me to talk to the service department to voice my concern.how many more people have to be injured before this recall is carried out.i for one, pray it is not one of my family members!!!very disappointed with how this is being handled!!!

The contact owned a 2005 subaru outback. The contact stated that the brakes failed to engage and the vehicle crashed into a tree and caught fire. The air bags did not deploy. Fourpeople were injured and police and fire reports were filed. A month prior to the accident, the vehicle was inspected and no failures were found. The vehicle was inspected after the crash and it was discovered that the tumbler system was defective. The vin was unavailable at the time of the complaint. The current and failure mileages were unknown. Updated 7/16/10 updated 07/27/10

Dt*:the contact stated while traveling 15 mph, the vehicle was hit in the front driver side wheel area.the airbags did not deploy.although the seat belt was worn, the contact sustained minor injuries to the head, neck, and spine.there was a police report taken at the scene.the vehicle was towed to an independent repair shop.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact received a recall notification for nhtsa campaign number: 15v323000 (air bags) and stated that the part needed was unavailable to perform the recall repair. The manufacturer was not notified of the issue. The contact had not experienced a failure. Parts distribution disconnect.

Takata recallsubaru case# [xxx]i received a recall notice about the ongoing takata airbag issue. Upon contacting subaru my wife was informed by "[xxx]" that :1) that only a "dealer" could do the repair work2) subaru would only cover $500 in transportation costsper the letter received:1) "subaru will replace the inflator for your front passenger air bag at no cost to you."2) "until this repair is performed, do not allow passengers to ride in the front passenger seat"given that i am in alaska (zip 99901) and that there is no current subaru dealer available in my area i was told that i would need to transport the vehicle to either juneau alaska, or seattle washington, both are only available by boat and after checking with multiple shipping and ferry services the cost would be around $1800 round trip to transport my vehicle.both my wife and i communicated this to "kyle" and again was told they would only cover $500. I proceeded to offer alternatives such as having a certified local shop do the work, or that because my area has a fair number of vehicles that they should send someone. I was basically told no and not provided any other remedy. Could you please look into this matter and find out why there is any issue in getting this repaired? in the meantime my family of 5 is having to take two cars, and now i am unable to sell my vehicle or trade it in until this issue is addressed. I am not upset about this, annoyed yes, but more importantly there are many other people in my area that simply can't afford to pay to have their cars fixed if subaru will not honor their own commitments. Thank you for your time[xxx]information redacted pursuant to the freedom of information act (foia), 5 u.s.c. 552(b)(6).

Takata recall. The contact owns a 2005 subara outback. The contact received notification of nhtsa campaign number: 15v323000 (air bags) however, the part needed to perform the repair was unavailable. The contact stated that the manufacturer exceeded a reasonable amount of time for the recall repair. The manufacturer was notified of the issue. The contact had not experienced a failure. Vin tool confirms parts not available.

Takata recall.subaru recall campaign wqr53.notice received with instruction not to allow front passenger.contacted six (6) local dealerships to remedy defect.all six advise they cannot schedule appointment to remedy defect as they have no parts and don't know when parts will be available.one dealer advised subaru of america is not cooperating with local dealer.each dealer advised to check back (in a month or two months) to see if they have parts.without use of front passenger seat my vehicle is rendered useless.no other options provided; i.e., a loner car or a rental vehicle.not the best way to run a railroad.has a class action lawsuit been filed?if so, please advise as to legal counsel.

Takata recall. The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact received notification of nhtsa campaign numbers: 15v323000 (air bags) and 14v311000 (service brakes, hydraulic); however, the parts to do the repairs were unavailable. The contact stated that the manufacturer exceeded a reasonable amount of time for the recall repairs. The dealer (serra subaru of traverse city, 1747 s garfield ave, traverse city, mi) was contacted and confirmed that the parts were not available for the recall remedies. The manufacturer was notified and was not able to confirm when the parts were to become available. The contact had not experienced a failure. Parts distribution disconnect.

Takata recall - it is completely unreasonable to get a recall and to have the passenger risking death and for subaru to not prioritize this immediately.people who have ordered back in february have not gotten the replacements.unacceptable.we are not suppose to use that seat????

I received a recall notice on my subaru back in february. I called the dealer where i bought the vehicle which was nashville subaru, 1512 broadway nashville, tn 37203. They advised me it would be two weeks to two months before they could repair my vehicle, and i received no response after that. Then, i called back may 9th, and they told me they needed another two weeks to order parts. And now, today's september 26th and they still have not repaired my vehicle, and i received no response by public service.

Takata recall. The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact received notification of nhtsa campaign number: 15v323000 (air bags); however, the part to do the recall repair was not available. The contact stated that the manufacturer exceeded a reasonable amount of time for the recall repair. The manufacturer was not made aware of the issue. The contact had not experienced a failure. Parts distribution disconnect.

I need to ave the airbag replaced asap.

2005 subaru. Consumer writes in regards to airbag safety recall. *ldthe consumer stated the dealer advised the airbag could not be replaced due to the vehicle having an intoxalyser. The consumer stated the process to having the intoxalyser removed and the recall completed was difficult.

My passenger side tanaka airbag was replaced in april. Within six months of this recall, my passenger side airbag indicator's buzzer and light (error code 26) continue to indicate a passenger in the seat without a passenger present. I feel this is a safety issue because i have been told by my subaru mechanic that the "passenger airbag may or may not deploy". I have found various blogs and forums indicating that i am one of hundreds to thousands that have this issue. I feel as though this safety issue should not be fixed at the financial burden of the consumer.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact received notification of nhtsa campaign number: 15v613000 (air bags); however, the part to do the repair was unavailable. The contact stated that the manufacturer exceeded a reasonable amount of time for the recall repair. The manufacturer was not made aware of the issue. The contact had not experienced a failure. ....updated 07/05/16 updated 07/21/16.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact received notification of nhtsa campaign number: 15v323000 (air bags). The part to do the repair was unavailable. The contact stated that the manufacturer exceeded a reasonable amount of time for the recall repair. The manufacturer was made aware of the issue. The vin was invalid. The contact had not experienced a failure. Parts distribution disconnect.

Takata recall.despite being contacted 2 months regarding this recall, and being told that we should not allow a passenger to ride in the front passenger seat, i have yet to hear from any subaru dealership.as a single car household, this has been extremely frustrating.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. While the vehicle was parked the contact noticed that the air bag light illuminated on the dashboard. The vehicle was taken to an independent mechanic for diagnostic testing. The technicians stated that the air bag sensor and module needed to be replaced. The technicians informed the contact of nhtsa recall campaign id number 04v274000 (component: air bags:side/window) for the air bags. The manufacturer was contacted and stated that there was no recall. The failure was not repaired. The approximate failure mileage was 64,000.

In 2008 the airbags on our car deployed spontaneously while driving down the interstate. Before the airbags deployed the seatbelt lights in our car began dinging and flashing as if someone were in the passenger seat, which was empty, and then they deployed on my husband. After 3 or so months subaru had the airbag components removed from the car and submitted to the manufacturer. Their investigation was inconclusive to what happened and they replaced the components with new ones assuming they had fixed the problem. July 11 i was backing out of my driveway and the lights began flashing again as if someone were in the passenger seat, which again was empty, and i pulled up and got out of the car immediately as i am 7 months pregnant and feared they might explode again and we were about to take a 6 hour drive. When we removed the keys the lights on the car remained on. Subaru now has the car and is investigating the problem. This car is a timebomb and i can't imagine putting it back on the road. These are the exact symptoms we had before the airbags exploded last time it just happens we were backing out of the driveway and not going 55 down the highway.

November 15, 2008 my husband was driving to work when the airbags in our 2005 subaru outback deployed without provocation.our car was immediately taken to the authorized subaru dealership here in puerto rico where they have yet to discover what caused this to happen.we purchased our car in seattle but we live here because my husband is stationed here for the military.we have been attempting to get subaru of america's assistance in determining what caused this deployment but they have not been very helpful.nothing has been repaired because we don't want anything done if they don't know what happened to the car.we are fearful to drive our car again and want subaru of america to be a little more active and interested in discovering what could have caused a serious safety malfunction in their vehicle.as far as we know the service manager here sent them an email informing them that after he had looked over the car, he sees no damage that could have caused it. This information we already knew, because we weren't involved in any sort of collision.so far this is the extent of their involvement in the situation.

Low beams replace several time, replaced both recently and both went out at the same time in the dark on they way to work.lights in dashboard constantly flashing on and off, abs, battery, brake. Speedometer jumping all over the place. Been happening over a month or so. Very upset can't figure out what it is.

While driving my outback lost suddenly lost all acceleration.the check engine light immediately came on and the cruise control light began to blink.the car continued to move forward but decelerated to about 15 mph which nearly resulted in my being rear ended.i was able to get to the side of the road where i turned the car off and turned it back on.after doing this the car behaved normally expect the check engine and cruise control lights stayed on.after about an hour, both lights went off.since then, this problem has recurred multiple times.i recently took the car to be repaired where the problem was diagnosed as a bad pedal assembly.however, i'm concerned that this problem will reoccur at speed and cause an accident.

I have been having a problem with my car for the 2-years and has been getting worse.the throttle pedal at times will become non-responsive and the engine idle cannot be controlled.at this time the check engine light is on with a code.p2138.i have taken the car to the dealer with no luck they could not find anything wrong.the car has left me stranded several times and i had to limp or be towed home.the rpm can be anywhere from idle to 3000 rpm and as i said the pedal has no control.i have replaced the accelerator pedal assembly and the problem was gone for the past six months.it has now failed again.

Without any accident, under normal usage, the vehicle's license plate lights failed. The problem was traced to a break in a conductor (wire) contained in a wiring harness that connects the vehicle to the rear hatch through a rubber bellows. Once the bellows was retracted, the broken wire was found along with twelve (12) other wires that were all nearly broken: their insulation was cracked and several wires ultimately broke completely upon further flexing. These other wires fed the brake lights, turn signals, running lights, hatch lock, and all other electrical circuits on the rear hatch. It appears that the insulation on this wire does not hold up in this environment and will ultimately fail in the course of several years. This poses a safety problem as the vehicles rear lights (turn signals, brake lights, etc.) can fail at any moment.

My back up lights and license plate lights were not working. Found the wires between the light gate and body of car were breaking one by one. Also my antenna wires were broken on other side same location. Was surprised to see this. Wires usually don't wear out like this i wouldn't think.

Rear wiper failure was first noticed followed by failure of the license plate light, the wiring harness in the rear lift gate has multiple broken wires where the door hinges. Appears that the wiring insulation becomes hardened and brittle, and will break instead of flexing. There are several other wires in the harness that are showing bare wire but have not yet broken. This is what all the harness enables and will eventually fail:rear wiper motorlicense plate lightrear gate latch switchrear gate lock actuatorrear defoggerback-up light rhrear defoggerback-up light lh

The wires that pass through the body to the liftgate that operate brake lights, tail lights, rear wiper, defroster, lock break and make a short or open circuit. Many subarus have this issue.

The wiring of the rear hatch door electrical components is faulty and the wires between the car roof and the hatch break over time, due to normal hatch functions (e.g. Opening/closing). Depending on which wires break, rear-windshield wipers, license plate lights, back-up lights fail, causing a safety concern.

While traveling in heavy flow rush hour multi-lane traffic at around 65 mph and at merging point of multi higher exchange with near zero shoulder or stopping lane, the car suddenly lost response from accelerator pedal. I manage to coast to a stop just between the triangle space separating two of the major highways varying two separate direction with very heavy traffic at high speed on both sides (nearly getting smashed several times before coming to the only possible yet dangerous place to stop). The car remain idling but very limp; afraid to venture to continue to the next exit because there would be no shoulder area to pull over, i called for help thinking the car had ran out of gas and was just running on fume. After enduring several minutes of near death moments of being crashed into by on-coming vehicles at high speed merging traffic coming from a curving road, i dangerously ventured to open doors into flowing traffic to fill the tank escaping death many times. The car started and was able to get off highway to fill tank.same limp pedal repeated again two days later coming off a two lane {two-way) bridge with absolutely no shoulder. I was able to coast to the end of the bridge to turn into a business parking without being plowed by the heavy traffic around.obd reading of the car indicate p2138 pointing to faulty fly-by-wire defect in the accelerator position sensor which is part of the accelerator assembly. I manage to escape death with this manufacturer defect. I just wonder how many crashes and deaths have resulted and will continue to result because of this very well reported issue with these subaru outbacks before the accelerator assembly units are recalled?

While driving on the highway at 65 mph, the car would not accelerate.the check engine light came on and the cruise control light flashed.once the car was turned off and restarted, the accelerator again engaged.this is an extremely dangerous (and common in subarus) malfunction.i was fortunate enough to be able to pull over on the side of the highway without incident.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact statedthat the vehicle stalled while driving 25 mph on numerous occasions. The vehicle was not diagnosed or repaired. The manufacturer was not made aware of the failure. The failure mileage was 112,000. ..updated 05/05/17 the consumer stated the failure was caused by the pedal assembly. The consumer repaired the vehicle. Updated 8/25/2017

Soon after purchasing the car, i realized that the rear wiper was not functioning.after checking an online owners forum i found that there is a common problem with the functions in the rear lift gate such as inoperable brake lights, rear wipers inoperable, and other items.this problem seems to be caused by the degradation of wire insulation and breakage of wire.upon further investigation i discovered my own vehicle has a severed wire located in the accordion boot on the right (passenger) side near the hinge for the lift gate.this could result is serious safety issues.as with any faulty electrical wiring there is also a risk for fire associated with this issue.

Immediately following heavy rain storms, my 2005 subaru legacy wagon had problems starting and running. The hole car shacks really bad.i know two other people with the same problem. My dealer said many people have come in with a 2005 with that same problem.it started at 18k and still haven't been about to fix after 80k. The engine 'stutters' or 'misfires'. I cant get my check engine light to come off.

Subaru outback 2005:the wire harness to the rear tailgate failed and shorted out the brake lights and reverse lights, creating a safety hazard while driving.

Sitting at stop light - light changes green - no acceleration. Car will move at idle speed creep through intersection. Pull over stop turn car off. Restart w accelerator working but cruise control indicator flashing and check engine light on. Error code indicates pedal position sensor and dealer says entire pedal assembly needs replaced. New 'drive-by-wire' accelerator system for subaru in 2005.repair: ~$200 with no change in assembly from what the service dept. Reports.

Rear wiring harness that passes from cabin to hatch door has several wires broken causing rear door lock and lights failures.

The wiring for thelicense plate lights failed in the upper righthatch hinge boot causing the license plate lights to not operate. The purple wire had broken inside the boot area.the purple wire is extremely small gauge for a location that is opened and closed often.

Wiring located on the rear passenger side between the hatch door and body (in the protective boot) was severed as a result of poor quality wiring and design.wires were stress-severed and nearly severed by normal operation of opening/closing the wagon rear door.apparently this is a common issue as discovered by visiting online forums.

Wires passing through rear hatch to rear lift gate crack and break from opening and closing. Rear lift gate lock not working, wire is broken in two. Wires for rear lights are cracking and about to sever as well.

Rear hatch harness wires are broken/ frayed. Backup lights do not work, and the rear wiper works intermittently. Every now and them rear defroster doesn't work. Hazard a lot of 2005-2009 outbacks have.

Second time this has happened. When in a stopped position and intend to pull out, motor running, but gas pedal does not engage.push all the way to floor - still nothing. In order to correct, must turn off engine and disconnect battery cable so vehicle can reset itself.also had problem when sitting still where vehicle began idling as if accelerator being pressed down - lasted 5-10 seconds then backed off. When purchased car used, had problems with cruise control not working and light flashing continuously.found that injector had to be replaced - apparently tied to cruise mechanism.this corrected the problem but quite expensive to repair.

The rear windshield wiper stopped working due to a bad electrical connection that occurs where the hatchback opens up. The wires fray and break from normal usage of the hatchback, causing loss of power to the rear windshield wiper, defogger and backup lights.i have experienced this problem and there a numerous blogs and videos on the internet showing this problem, this should be recall item for all 3rd generation subaru outbacks(2005-2009).

Just after getting off i-43 near sheboygan on frontage road my car lost all power and no acceleration on gas pedal. Check engine light came on and cruise control light was blinking. I had to shift to neutral and pull over to a shoulder. Turned the car off for couple of minutes while i check under the hood. Started the car just fine but check engine light was still on and cruise was blinking. Subaru mechanic read error code p2138 throttle/pedal position sensor/switch 'd'/'e' voltage rationality. They said it was caused by bad contacts on tps sensor by the gas pedal. He reset the code and it has not appeared again for almost a week. I am afraid of it going off again while my wife and kids are driving it on the highway. Does someone need to die before subaru takes action on this.

Rear hatch wires on wagon liftgate that go thru rubber boots have defective insulation causing wires to break in multiple places.systems include : back up lights, license plate, wiper.

It started with the dome light sometimes working and other times not,then the remote to open doors. I changed battery and fuse, did not help. So everything is locked and unlocked manually. Next it was the seat belt bell.it will go on when your driving when belt is on. Now it won't chime at all just the light flashes.next it was the head lamps. Changed one, then immediately the other went out. The head lamps are not equal in positioning. And now the stereo only has the right side working (not sure if that's connected to electrical)it's been a nightmare.today the dome light decided to work.i would never buy another subaru again and want to spruce this one up an get rid of it.

Dt:consumer had this vehicle 3 months and the dealer had tojump start the motor three times. Also,remote won't open the door when the battery was dead. Changed the compass in the mirror. The vehicle was at the dealer.they could not find anything wrong withvehicle.this happened while test drivingvehicle. Dealersaid they would put in a new battery,andwould fixit. Hwever, problem recurred.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. While driving approximately 35 mph, the battery warning indicator illuminated and the steering wheel seized, which required excessive force. The failure recurred once. The vehicle was towed to the dealer who stated that the alternator bolt fractured. The vehicle was repaired. The manufacturer was not notified of the failure. The approximate failure mileage was 120,000.

In comparison with many trucks and cars i have driven in winter conditions for over 30 years, our 2005 suburu outback is much more unstable especially in the rear end whenever hard packed snow or ice is encountered even at moderate speeds (30-50 mph).at least once this cause the vehicle to spin uncontrollably.in identical conditions, a truck in 2wd (i have several trucks on my ranch) is far more stable.there is a clear safety problem with this vehicle for which tires, inflation, alignment according to manufacturers specs fails to cure.

I was pulling into a parking space and put on the brake. Vehicle didn't respond to braking and kept going, over the,curb, across the median and hit 5 parked cars before it stopped.

While traveling in heavy flow rush hour multi-lane traffic at around 65 mph and at merging point of multi higher exchange with near zero shoulder or stopping lane, the car suddenly lost response from accelerator pedal. I manage to coast to a stop just between the triangle space separating two of the major highways varying two separate direction with very heavy traffic at high speed on both sides (nearly getting smashed several times before coming to the only possible yet dangerous place to stop). The car remain idling but very limp; afraid to venture to continue to the next exit because there would be no shoulder area to pull over, i called for help thinking the car had ran out of gas and was just running on fume. After enduring several minutes of near death moments of being crashed into by on-coming vehicles at high speed merging traffic coming from a curving road, i dangerously ventured to open doors into flowing traffic to fill the tank escaping death many times. The car started and was able to get off highway to fill tank.same limp pedal repeated again two days later coming off a two lane {two-way) bridge with absolutely no shoulder. I was able to coast to the end of the bridge to turn into a business parking without being plowed by the heavy traffic around.obd reading of the car indicate p2138 pointing to faulty fly-by-wire defect in the accelerator position sensor which is part of the accelerator assembly. I manage to escape death with this manufacturer defect. I just wonder how many crashes and deaths have resulted and will continue to result because of this very well reported issue with these subaru outbacks before the accelerator assembly units are recalled?

I am the third owner so after my problems, i researched to learn the first owner couldn't maintain tire life; subaru replaced all four tires and kept trying realignment for her. The second owner informed me he could not maintain new tire life, never acknowledging to me that thecar is all over the road and a hazard to your life.being the third owner, i never thoughtwhen i purchased this 2005 subaru outback that it could be an engineering problem with a company like subaru, not identified or recalled. I have learned the car is unsafe and after research online have learned there could be a serious engineering problem with the raised rear suspension. I have the subaru receipts from former two owners (they were related) and obviously subaru is negligent in not identifying the issue and reporting it. Two different shops have assured me it is not ball joints, or suspension, etc. I spent $750 on the rearend and new alignment at the specialty spring and suspension shop and those tires seem to be wearing evenly.the front tires are cupped on the outside severely in six months. The car is all over the road.

We have a 2005 subaru outback that sways in the rear of car under the following conditions 1. Over bumps the rear will swing to the rightand dip. When roads are slick it will almost spin the vehicle. If you are in a left hand curve, even at low speed, the condition is exaggerated more than you would expect sort of like it was pushed in addition to the normal inertia you would experience. 2. Rear end traction becomes unstable under icy conditions where it appears that too much power is being distributed to the rear of the driveline then oscillating to each individual rear wheel. In my opinion 100% of the vehicles power concentrated to the rear differential is alternately distributed between the rear wheels and kind of gets stuck in this mode.

On any wet or snowy pavement car is ghost walking, like the rear end has marbles under it. Speed of 35 mph, straight driving, on wet pavement.like a cat walking on its nails.terrified. Had alignment, new tires, new rear struts, sway bar, transmission wiring harness. Disabled abs so at least i control braking

Gas pedal failed while the car was traveling at 65 mph on a highway.unable to accelarate.total failure of pedal.luckily pulled over to the shoulder before another vehicle plowed into me.restarted vehicle and pedal operated properly.very disconcerting.failure code was p2138.

On approximately 10 occasions right after a rain when i start up the car the engine light starts blinking and the car runs roughly with little power. After a short time the car power returns but the check engine light stays on for about a week. Once the light goes out the car then runs normal until the next rainstorm. It then does the same all over.

Traveling at highway speeds (~75 mph) during the morning rush hour on the highway, experienced sudden loss of throttle control and resulting deceleration. The check engine light glowed steady and the cruise light was flashing. After pulling off to the shoulder (across three lanes) and shutting the engine off and restarting the engine, throttle control resumed.check engine light still glows steady and the cruise light is flashing with the cruise control not working.

This is the first subaru i've ever owned and so far it's been a nightmare.i have had to repair: an oil leak in the engine that required the whole engine to be taken apart.while replacing a seemingly simple part, the hydraulic lifts that keep the back hatch open, the threading that holds the screw in broke off and i had to hire a mechanic yet again to weld that part to be able to screw in the screw to hold the lift in place.and now, the entire interior lighting doesn't work, including the stereo, all the dome lights and the remote control system.in addition to that, the rear wiper doesn't work properly.

Return fuel line leak. The leak is on the drivers side on top of the engine. A small rubber hose shrinks in the cold allowing fuel to leak on the engine block. A strong smell of fuel in the cabin when stationary. Leak goes away when the engine is warm. This problem has been reported in other subaru models. I have repaired the problem once before as well as the previous owner of the car, and now it needs to be repaired again.

Bought car in 2013, have replaced the turbo 3 times! first within less than a month of ownership. Again in 2016 & again 3 months later. January 2018, again the car left me stranded for the 4th time! the outback has been in the garage for almost 4 weeks, only to find out the turbo had a stripped support, which cost me a 'new, used motor!!! i bought my 1st outback in 2000 off the showroom floor, never had any major repairs, just routine maintenance. Drove her until sept 2013 due to a crash, which was totaled.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact stated that while driving 60 mph, he heard an abnormal noise as the vehicle failed to accelerate. The vehicle was towed to an independent mechanic for diagnosis and the contact was informed that the engine was blown. The failure had occurred two years prior to the recent failure and the engine had been replaced. The third engine was installed and the vehicle was repaired. The failure and current mileage was 105,000.returned by usps on 6/7/2013. 2nd attempt on 6/11/2013 failed.

Subaru outback 2.5xt. 2005 check engine light came on & i could hear whistling or whoosing sounds from engine area. Took it to an auto repair place slowly,asap & there it sits. Has 155,000 miles on it & i maintain & love my car!the gears in the turbo 'broke apart' & left shards of metal in oil pan & at this time who knows where else. Was hoping there was a recall as i maintain my vehicles & it seems like a manufacturer error.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. While driving at approximately 25 mph, the accelerator pedal was applied and the vehicle experienced a loss of power as the check engine light blinked off and on. The vehicle was merged over to the side of the road and then driven to the contact's residence. The vehicle was taken to an independent mechanic, who was unable to diagnose the failure. The vehicle was not repaired. The approximate failure mileage was 150,000.

Driving on interstate freeway, in heavy traffic, with the cruise control set, when the vehicle suddenly lost all power and throttle response.the "check engine" light came on, and the "cruise" light started blinking.engine continued to run at high idle but speed and rpm were not maintained. I was lucky enough to cross 4 lanes of traffic and stop. Turned off the engine, which was running at 2200 rpm.after a brief stop and investigation, i was able to restart the engine and drive normally to an auto parts store.i scanned the obd ii code (dtc code) and found p2138 - throttle position sensor.no injuries, but this is a potentially deadly issue.has recurred one time since.

Head gasket leak causing anti-freeze leaking.,. Began after 100k extended warranty expired.told that caused due to defect in engine design.later models with new design have not had problem.subaru is knows about issue, but not taking any action to compensate for repair (ext. Cost around $3k).

With 35,600 miles on our 2005 subaru outback xt, the turbo failed.the dealer service technician said this was do to the condition of the engine oil which was 7 months old and had 5,400 miles on it.all 7 of the vehicles oil changes were done within the 7,500 mile interval set forth in owners/vehicle maintenance manual. According to the subaru service bulletin # 02-103-07 (http://store.forcedperformance.net/merchant2/graphics/subaru_oil/02-103-07.pdf -- not sent to owners), there appears to be a design defect with the "banjo bolt" oil supply line to the turbo, which make this engine unable to live up to the specified maintenance intervals in its power train warranty.

I have been experiencing a problem while accelerating from a stop or from coasting, such as when a red light has just turned green. I begin to depress the accelerator and the engine just about dies. This has nearly caused me to get "t-boned" at intersections numerous times. I have brought it to the attention of two different subaru dealers and they say that nothing is wrong with it. I have heard that other subaru owners are having this problem but subaru will not admit that this is a safety issue.

Second time this has happened. When in a stopped position and intend to pull out, motor running, but gas pedal does not engage.push all the way to floor - still nothing. In order to correct, must turn off engine and disconnect battery cable so vehicle can reset itself.also had problem when sitting still where vehicle began idling as if accelerator being pressed down - lasted 5-10 seconds then backed off. When purchased car used, had problems with cruise control not working and light flashing continuously.found that injector had to be replaced - apparently tied to cruise mechanism.this corrected the problem but quite expensive to repair.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact stated that the engine failed. The contact took the vehicle to the dealer and they were told that the banjo filters screen failed and sent shards of metal through the engine. The dealer told the contact that in 2007, the vehicle was serviced because of the failure and the engine was previously rebuilt. The contact stated that the information was not listed on the vehicle history report. The vehicle was not repaired. The failure mileage and current mileage was 62,000.

2005 subaru outback with a blown head gasket at a cost of $2,000. This is in addition to a bad turbo charger two months ago at about $1,800. Many subaru's have this head gasket problem but subaru has not done a recall. Thousands listed on internet having this head gasket problem.

At approximately 85,000 miles, the check engine light on our 2005 subaru outback xt went on and we took the vehicle in to our local repair shop to check the light and theyrecommended having the vehicle towed to our subaru dealer. The vehicle was towed in and the dealer service person called stating that timthe turbo had failed (along with the cv boot & alternator belt). I provided the information regarding our official subaru 100,000 mile gold plus "extended service contract" which we purchased for $1975. The service representative would not confirm whether or not these components would be covered under our service contract and then called me and said subaru denied the claim pending receipt of service records. My husband and my father have changed the oil, air filters and performed general service in combination with service by various service shops. My records are not complete and i expect that subaru will try to deny coverage of the turbo due to this. There are ample reports on subaru forums reporting the same failure and i feel that this problem is not due to owner negligence, but by faulty design. This type of failure should be the responsibility of the manufacturer and they should service the vehicle per the service contract without causing undue stress to the owner of the vehicle.

I have been having a problem with my car for the 2-years and has been getting worse.the throttle pedal at times will become non-responsive and the engine idle cannot be controlled.at this time the check engine light is on with a code.p2138.i have taken the car to the dealer with no luck they could not find anything wrong.the car has left me stranded several times and i had to limp or be towed home.the rpm can be anywhere from idle to 3000 rpm and as i said the pedal has no control.i have replaced the accelerator pedal assembly and the problem was gone for the past six months.it has now failed again.

On two separate occasions, my 2005 subaru outback got stuck after incurring a minor obstruction (several inches of snow in one case and a somewhat sharp incline in another case) while driving in high altitudes (10,000 ft to 11,500 ft). On both occasions, the car suddenly lost most of its power and no wheels would turn. Despite pressing the accelerator to the floor, the engine never went above 2000 rpms. Fortunately, on both occasions, there were people around to push the car. Once the tires were totally free of any obstruction, normal engine power returned and the car could be driven.i took the subaru to my home dealership in olathe ks (jack miller) on june 29, 2005, a couple weeks after the first incident. Dealer said he could not replicate the problem , so he could not fix it. The invoice notes: "2000 rpm is appox torque converter stall speed."following the second problem on july 20, i took my car to john elway subaru west in golden co.dealer invoice says:" if tires were not spinning, car had traction and was not able to build boost at altitude to produce power." dealer, however, said they could not replicate the inability to build boost, and were thus unable to fix the car.i filed a verbal complaint with subaru of america on july 27 and followed up on july 29. As of then, subaru of america was still trying to contact the dealer.subaru markets its cars as having superior performance in the mountains, snow and in difficult driving conditions. Subaru enjoys a large market share in the colorado mountains, where both my "not able to build boost" problems occurred. My car cannot be safely driven in the co mountains, particularly on mountain passes or dirt roads, because help may not be available to get the car running again. I do not know if my experiences are isolated or part of a larger problem. In either case, i am disappointed that subaru has been unwilling or unable to fix this potentially serious safety issue.

2005 subaru outback.the car was in park and my right foot was tucked back behind my left foot which was resting on the foot rest pad on the far left side of the floor.the engine was idling normally when suddenly it went to very high revs for 4 to 5 seconds and then returned to normal idle.later the same evening, as i slowly entered my garage and applied normal brake pressure, the car first slowed (as expected) then suddenly began to accelerate.i applied hard brake pressure and the car stopped.it did not seem like the engine had revved as high as the earlier incident and it only lasted for a couple of seconds, but there was a definite, brief surge forward as i entered the garage.

2005 subaru outback 2.5xt was parked in a public / private parking structure at approximately 6:30pm on 10/13/2005.at approximately 8pm the fire alarm was triggered by vehicle catching on fire.fire dept found no signs of arson or foul play, looked to be an electrical fire in the front right headlight cluster.no response from subaru, insurance dropped my policy - loss not covered!

I took a cross-country trip this summer from la to kansas city, mo.i had the car serviced and everything checked out before i left both going and coming back.i left kc to head back to la.3 hours outside of kc i saw my check engine light come on and the temperature gauge up to red.i pulled over immediately. Smoke poured out of my car. I put coolant and water in it 3 times. It seemed fine when i started the engine, then the needle would go up to red.i didn't dare drive it,so i called aaa. They towed me to a subaru dealership in ks.i was told my head gaskets had blown.they fixed them.i had to stay there overnight. They called me the next morning and told me before i was to pick up the car that they had taken it out for a test drive and it broke down on them. This time it was the tensioner to the timing belt had slipped time and the belt had shattered into. Okay, that was another week and a half stranded to get that fixed. I finally left to drive back tola. The car overheated all the way back to la.it was the worse trip in my life.i stopped in co. They told me it was my radiator cap not holding pressureas long as i kept the rpm's up the car would stay cool.i have to say with all that going on, the car got me home. Whew! it was a nail biter.when i got back to la the dealer there told me i had to have new head gaskets. What?!i said,i just had new ones done.they found out that the heads were warped. No one checked.now, here is the craziest thing. My car had only 19,000 miles on the car when it broke down.19,000! it was practically still a new car! it was still under warranty for the power train.i had the heads planed and new gaskets put in.thedealership in ks and la started pointing fingers at whose fault it was and meanwhile my car is sitting at the dealership, with them doing nothing to it.i finally found someone at subaru corporate who helped me out.then a couple months go by and my car starts stalling intermittently. Lemon!

2005 outback x limited with 67,000 miles.check engine light comes on followed by a whining sound from engine compartment and then rattling noises accompanied by loss of power.car was transported to garage and diagnosed with blown turbo.metal shavings discovered in oil filter.total engine loss.subaru denies coverage and will not accept responsibility for design flaw.

Subaru outback 2005 pzev - head gasket failure.the cylinder head gaskets on this vehicle have failed such that engine oil drips onto the hot exhaust system, and produces visible, foul smelling smoke whenever the car is driven.manufacturer has refused to repair under warranty, or recognize a problem, in spite of similar failures in earlier models, and previous class action lawsuit settlement because of those failures.the car is still under an emissions warranty that will expire at 157,500 miles.the car was sold as a partial zero-emissions vehicle, but clearly the smoke from the dripping oil exceeds any emission standard.my feeling is that the manufacturer should repair the car under the emissions warranty, as well as prior failure history.

2005 subaru outback totally destroyed by fire of unknown origin approximately 30 minutes after engine shut off.no one was in the car and police/fire dept determined arson unlikely.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact stated while driving on an incline the vehicle responded slowly. The cruise control and check engine light illuminated on the instrument panel. The dealership diagnosis determined that the turbo charger filter was clogged and the shaft in the turbo charger was broken. The vehicle was not repaired. The manufacturer was contacted. The failure and current mileage was 67,446.

With 35,600 miles on our 2005 subaru outback xt, the turbo failed.the dealer service technician said this was do to the condition of the engine oil which was 7 months old and had 5,400 miles on it.all 7 of the vehicles oil changes were done within the 7,500 mile interval set forth in owners/vehicle maintenance manual. According to the subaru service bulletin # 02-103-07 (http://store.forcedperformance.net/merchant2/graphics/subaru_oil/02-103-07.pdf -- not sent to owners), there appears to be a design defect with the "banjo bolt" oil supply line to the turbo, which make this engine unable to live up to the specified maintenance intervals in its power train warranty.

Consumer concerned about failure of the catalytic converter in the 2005 outback. The consumer wanted a federal emissions equipped vehicle. The consumer was not informed before he purchased the vehicle that it had a mandated california emissionssystem, which could result ina decrease of power.the vehicle required special fuel which may not be available in the states where he needs to drive. Updated 04/11/06.

Consumr's 2005 subaru outback had automatic climate control problems.

The wiring for thelicense plate lights failed in the upper righthatch hinge boot causing the license plate lights to not operate. The purple wire had broken inside the boot area.the purple wire is extremely small gauge for a location that is opened and closed often.

Wiring located on the rear passenger side between the hatch door and body (in the protective boot) was severed as a result of poor quality wiring and design.wires were stress-severed and nearly severed by normal operation of opening/closing the wagon rear door.apparently this is a common issue as discovered by visiting online forums.

This is the first subaru i've ever owned and so far it's been a nightmare.i have had to repair: an oil leak in the engine that required the whole engine to be taken apart.while replacing a seemingly simple part, the hydraulic lifts that keep the back hatch open, the threading that holds the screw in broke off and i had to hire a mechanic yet again to weld that part to be able to screw in the screw to hold the lift in place.and now, the entire interior lighting doesn't work, including the stereo, all the dome lights and the remote control system.in addition to that, the rear wiper doesn't work properly.

My wife and i recently purchased a used 2005 subaru outback.the headlights on this vehicle are what i consider to be dangerously dim, barely lighting up the road.both the fog lamps and also the high beams work well, but the low beam light (which is produced from a different bulb than the high beam) is very inadequate.i have replaced the bulbs with higher intensity bulbs.this offered little if any increase in lighting.i have also had the electrical system checked to assure the proper voltage is being supplied.googleing this problem has told me i'm not alone.other subaru owners complain of the same issue.here's what i have researched and determined to be the problem.there is an inner reflective cavity in which the headlight bulb is housed.the reflection process within this housing magnifies the light produced by the bulb.this process is similar to that of a reflective prism inside a lighthouse.in the case of our subaru, the reflective material inside of the headlight bulb housing has either worn away or become clouded to the degree that the light produced by the bulbs no longer reflects adequately to produce a bright light.these headlights need to either be replaced or perhaps somehow removed from the vehicle, opened up and then repaired.in either case this would be very expensive to the degree in which most consumers would not be willing to incur the cost, thereby continuing to take their chances driving at night with unsatisfactory headlights.my questions:is this considered a safety issue?if so, is it the responsibility of the manufacturer to correct this problem?do i have to pay for any corrections?i'd be grateful for any help or suggestions you can offer to assist me with this issue. I feel this is a potentially dangerous problem, not just for myself, but other subaru owners.thank you for your time.

Rear wiper failure was first noticed followed by failure of the license plate light, the wiring harness in the rear lift gate has multiple broken wires where the door hinges. Appears that the wiring insulation becomes hardened and brittle, and will break instead of flexing. There are several other wires in the harness that are showing bare wire but have not yet broken. This is what all the harness enables and will eventually fail:rear wiper motorlicense plate lightrear gate latch switchrear gate lock actuatorrear defoggerback-up light rhrear defoggerback-up light lh

Dt: when the daytime running light are on the taillight are off.the brake lights arenot connected to the running lights and as a result the consuemr did not remember to turnlights on when it was dusk outside. This almost caused the consumer'svehicle to be rear ended onseveral different occasions.the consuemr feels that htis may be asaftey issue therefore contacted teh manufacturer.ipdated 3/9/2006 -

My back up lights and license plate lights were not working. Found the wires between the light gate and body of car were breaking one by one. Also my antenna wires were broken on other side same location. Was surprised to see this. Wires usually don't wear out like this i wouldn't think.

Rear hatch harness wires are broken/ frayed. Backup lights do not work, and the rear wiper works intermittently. Every now and them rear defroster doesn't work. Hazard a lot of 2005-2009 outbacks have.

Defrosters and all digital climate controls are unresponsive. I cannot see out of my vehicle

Driving at night.stopped to get gas.went to start car and turn on lights.both headlights out-just like that.had to drive home on running lights; luckily less than 5 miles.headlight issues started about 10k miles ago where individual lights have gone out; have replaced ind low beam lights 4x in the last 10k miles.never had 2 go out at once like this-at night.did a search on internet and found numerous reports of owners with same issue and it doesn't sound like subaru is too interested in resolving when left to its own accord.

Low beams replace several time, replaced both recently and both went out at the same time in the dark on they way to work.lights in dashboard constantly flashing on and off, abs, battery, brake. Speedometer jumping all over the place. Been happening over a month or so. Very upset can't figure out what it is.

Subaru outback 2005:the wire harness to the rear tailgate failed and shorted out the brake lights and reverse lights, creating a safety hazard while driving.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact stated that both headlights failed. The vehicle was taken to an independent mechanic for repair. The vehicle was not diagnosed and the manufacturer was not notified of the incident. The approximate failure mileage was 20000. The vin was unavailable.

We purchased a used 2005 subaru outback ltd. Wagon in august of 2008 and almost immediately had to replace the left front driver's low beam headlight bulb.since that time, we have replaced 3 more left side headlight low beam bulbs and 2 right side low beam headlight bulbs.subaru tells us there are no issues with their electrical system, yet they claim that they have redesigned the low beam headlight bulbs 3 times now and that their branded bulbs should work.at appx. $20.00 each, their solution should not be acceptable.we have spent over $100.00 replacing bulbs that should last for years and years, not 2-3 months!we are asking for assistance with this problem.we live in a rural area of colorado where there are few street or highway lights and wildlife is always a concern while driving.you need proper vehicle lighting to remain safe on the road and this known defect by subaru needs to be addressed.headlight failure doesn't always happen near a subaru dealer.off the shelf replacement bulbs should do the job, but don't because subaru is not sharing the correct lighting technology with the aftermarket manufacturers.this may not be the first complaint you have received.we see many 2005-2006 subaru's like ours with burned out headlamps.thank you for your consideration of our complaint.

Without any accident, under normal usage, the vehicle's license plate lights failed. The problem was traced to a break in a conductor (wire) contained in a wiring harness that connects the vehicle to the rear hatch through a rubber bellows. Once the bellows was retracted, the broken wire was found along with twelve (12) other wires that were all nearly broken: their insulation was cracked and several wires ultimately broke completely upon further flexing. These other wires fed the brake lights, turn signals, running lights, hatch lock, and all other electrical circuits on the rear hatch. It appears that the insulation on this wire does not hold up in this environment and will ultimately fail in the course of several years. This poses a safety problem as the vehicles rear lights (turn signals, brake lights, etc.) can fail at any moment.

We own a 2005 subaru outback llbean wagon with projection headlights.my wife drives the car usually, but during the holidays i drove it quite a bit especially at night. I noticed a distinctive black line running horizontally with the vehicle at 180 degrees that also runs across the horizon of the road similar to what an oldprojector does on a white screen. (creates a box of light for the image. Butoutside the boundary of the projector there is no image or light.when driving on a perfectly horizontal road the projector lights extend out let'ssay 250 yards +/-. But when the road undulates the headlight projection of the road ahead is cut off! it's like something shuts off the projected light ahead andthe road becomes severely darkened. However, when i turn on my highbeams the entire road front and sides are adequately lit.i feel this could be a penitential safety issue, especially if someone driving in fog, heavy rain, or snow. How can you maintain a safe condition if your forward light is essentially cut offbecause of the limitation of the projector design of the headlight?i have expressed my concern to subaru customer service, but there's nothing they can do according to person i spoke to.i just want to go on record with my concerns. Apparently according to the subaru mechanic i spoke to today, others have expressed similar complaints about the 2006 tribeca which has the same headlight set up.sincerely,ap gulla.

It would be hard for the consumer to see during night time with the front glass headlights lens.dealership was notified, but did not resolve the problem.

The headlight angle makes it impossible to see when going over a bump or when the road goes down, it is almost like the road is disappearing in front.the design is poor.*tc

Dt:2005 subaru outback - the problem was with the headlights.they did not provide enough light to drive safely at night.while driving at night, the consumer could not see. There was very limited road way vision, with only a couple hundred feet in front of the car that was lit up properly, from that point on it was just black. The consumer had to drive with the high beams on to get home safely. The consumer spoke to the dealership and they said that it was the design of the headlights.the dealership said there was nothing that they could do to adjust them.

Dt contact stated the headlights were too low, they projected downward. He took the vehicle to the dealer, they raised the headlights.the contactwas not satisfied with them, and took the vehicle back to the dealer. The dealer again adjusted the headlights. The vehicle has been adjusted three times. However, the contact still had difficulty seeing in front of the vehicle. The dealer toldhim that all vehicles with project beam bulbswere like that.

The headlights on the 2005 subaru outback do not provide enough illumination. There is a sharp low jagged line like a curtain of darkness where the light ends. At night,when the car encounters a dip in the road, visibility obscured all but for a few feet.it is very, very dangerous.

I purchased my 05 subaru legacy outback in september 04.the passenger side low beam headlight went out in october 05 and i had a local mechanic replace it with the recommended replacement bulb.i noticed that now the right low beam is more angled down than previously, making visibility at night more limited than it was before the replacement.in december 05 the driver's side low beam headlight also expired and my father and i replaced it with the same compatible part.i noticed that night that the driver's side low beam was now only illuminating about 10 feet in front of the car (less than the right low beam now) and so i had to crane forward over the steering wheel to see the part of the road that was illuminated.my dad and i adjusted them as much as we could but there's really not much to adjust.now, when i drive at night i'm mostly relying on street lights and other environmental lighting to illuminate the road rather than my low beams because they really don't show you anything of the road more than 10-20 feet in front of you (fortunately i live in the city so it's pretty well illuminated at night).the only way to see the road safely if i'm in a poorly lit area is with the high beams now and judging from other posted complaints there's really nothing the dealer can do to adjust them.

Consumer feel that the headlight are pointed too low to the ground. This causes poor visibility while driving at night. Dealer was contacted, andinformed the consumer that the headlights could not be adjusted and that it met the specs.the consumer stated that visibility was cut in half.only half of the roadway was illuminated during night driving.the upper half of the beam was blocked out.*tc

Dt: the contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The front headlights do not go far enough out and it results in blackness because they do not shine where they are suppose to. The distance of the light does not carryar enoughwhendriving down the highway.one sees bright lights whichnot go to dim, they gofrom straight to darkness. The dealership claims the headlights cannot be adjusted because they are to specific.

Headlights.the low beams do not illuminate the roadway beyond, perhaps 50 feet.cannot see far enough ahead at night on dark roadways.very dangerous situation, especially in nh where deer and moose in the roadway are a real problem.

We own a 2005 subaru outback llbean wagon with projection headlights.my wife drives the car usually, but during the holidays i drove it quite a bit especailly at night. I noticed a distinctive black line running horizontally with the vehicle at 180 degrees that also runs across the horizon of the road similar to what an oldprojector does on a white screen. (creates a box of light for the image. Butoutside the boundry of the projector there is no image or light.when driving on a perfectly horizontal road the projector lights extend out let'ssay 250 yards +/-. But when the road undulates the headlight projcetion of the road ahead is cut off! it's like something shuts off the projected light ahead andthe road becomes severly darkened. However, when i turn on my highbeams the entire road front and sides are adequately lit.i feel this could be a pontential safety issue, especially if someone driving in fog, heavy rain, or snow. How can you maintain a safe condition if your forward light is esentially cut offbecause of the limitation of the projcetor design of the headlight?i have expressed my concern to subaru customer service, but there's nothing they can do according to person i spoke to.i just want to go on record with my concerns. Apparantly according to the subru mechanic i spoke to today, others have expressed similar complaints about the 2006 tribeca which has the same headlight set up.sincerely,ap gulla.

2005 subaru outback 2.5xt was parked in a public / private parking structure at approximately 6:30pm on 10/13/2005.at approximately 8pm the fire alarm was triggered by vehicle catching on fire.fire dept found no signs of arson or foul play, looked to be an electrical fire in the front right headlight cluster.no response from subaru, insurance dropped my policy - loss not covered!

The headlight only illuminated 20 to 25 feet in front of the vehicle.the low beam lights only illuminate one foot on either side making nightime drivingfrightening and stressful.a dark shadow appears to drop 25 feet in front of the vehicle.*tc

There was a defect in the lighting and the adjustment caused low beams to create a glare to the oncoming traffic.the high and low beam filaments were in one bulb and the bulb was surrounded by a collar which may had contributed to the problem.when the low beams were on or when driving at night in rural areas, it looked as if a dark shade was pulled down making the lighted area only about 6 feet off of the ground throughout 180 degrees horizontally. *sc

I had my 2005 subaru outback sent to shop for tune-up.now over the last year i have been having gas fumes entering the passenger cabin when ever you run the a/c or front window defogger with the recirculation air off. (meaning letting fresh air in).when ever i am at a stand still (ie-at traffic light or in traffic or when i am de-icing or de-fogging the front windshield when not in motion) the smell of gas comes through the vent and is making me sick and dizzy.i have attempted to have two different subaru dealers correct the issue but to no luck.they cannot figure it out and it seems that this is an on going and persistent problem with subaru vehicles.i am concerned for my health and safe operation of the vehicle.it seems that no one will attempt to really fix the problem.i have read on numerous forums that this is a common problem with subaru's, yet nothing is ever done to correct a possibly fatal accident or asphyxiation from happening.please investigate.

Sitting at stop light - light changes green - no acceleration. Car will move at idle speed creep through intersection. Pull over stop turn car off. Restart w accelerator working but cruise control indicator flashing and check engine light on. Error code indicates pedal position sensor and dealer says entire pedal assembly needs replaced. New 'drive-by-wire' accelerator system for subaru in 2005.repair: ~$200 with no change in assembly from what the service dept. Reports.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact stated that when driving the vehicle he noticed an overpowering smell of gas. Once he inspected the vehicle, he noticed that there was a leak near the fuel tank. The vehicle was taken to an independent mechanic where they advised him that the fuel tank was fractured due to corrosion. The manufacturer was not contacted. The failure mileage was approximately 126,000.

I began to smell the odor of raw gasoline as the temperatures became consistently in thesingle to sub-zero range. I contacted subaru of americaand set up an appointment with my subaru dealer for jan. 3rd. The dealer informed me that the fuel lines and clamps would need to be replaced at a cost of $500 (after an ~ $300 compensation). I rebutted and asked soa to pay for everything as this seems like a fundamental engineering/design flaw and it is also the 2nd time that i have had to make this repair (first time was when the car had ~40,000 to 50,000 miles on it)- had to replace the intake gaskets as well (per dealer). They have declined to compensate me further and claim the issue is age related. When i asked (soa) if this was a known issue for newer subarus, they said they did not know. I asked if they did not know or couldn't say and the responded "both".bottom-line: fuel leaks, of this nature due to poor design, should not be something consumers should have to worry about none-the-less pay for.

Fuel is leaking from the welded seam on the passenger side of the fuel tank when the tank is full. I parked the car in the garage after filling the tank, went into the house, and the next morning found a small puddle of gas just forward and inboard of the right rear tire, and a very strong smell of gasoline . I could see a drip approximately every 10 seconds.my neighborhood mechanic examined the car and diagnosed the leak at the welded seam, not at the fuel filler tube connection at the tank, and recommended it be fixed at the dealer. It is at minooka subaru in minooka, pa. Right now.

With 35,600 miles on our 2005 subaru outback xt, the turbo failed.the dealer service technician said this was do to the condition of the engine oil which was 7 months old and had 5,400 miles on it.all 7 of the vehicles oil changes were done within the 7,500 mile interval set forth in owners/vehicle maintenance manual. According to the subaru service bulletin # 02-103-07 (http://store.forcedperformance.net/merchant2/graphics/subaru_oil/02-103-07.pdf -- not sent to owners), there appears to be a design defect with the "banjo bolt" oil supply line to the turbo, which make this engine unable to live up to the specified maintenance intervals in its power train warranty.

Gas pedal failed while the car was traveling at 65 mph on a highway.unable to accelarate.total failure of pedal.luckily pulled over to the shoulder before another vehicle plowed into me.restarted vehicle and pedal operated properly.very disconcerting.failure code was p2138.

Car suddenly looses power and will not run above 1500 rpm it will run but you have to turn it on and off several times it does this when pulling out or going steady down the road .... Cruise light flashing and check engine light on

I was attempting to accelerate from a stop light and my outback acted as though i took my foot off the accelerator. The more i attempted to accelerate the less it responded. If the oncoming traffic hadn't noticed, they would have hit me. When i finally got it off the road and shut if off for awhile, it started but didn't run correctly. I called the subaru dealer and they hauled it 90 miles to their shop. The replaced the foot pedal sensor and it worked ok until the last 2 weeks and it is acting like it did 2 years ago. As i visit with other owners, they say they have the same issue but do not worry about it. I feel as though this is a safety feature that needs attention and a permanent fix for a solution before some one gets hurt do to the inability to accelerate and get out of harms way.

On random occasions the accelerator pedal quits working, resulting in sudden deceleration with the engine speed not responding to the pedal position. I have to maneuver the vehicle off the roadway, turn off the ignition and wait. Upon restarting the car drives fine until the next failure. Occasionally it takes e few tries to reset.

My vehicle has started to leak fuel after cold starts in colder weather (below 50 degrees f). The odor inside the cabin is enough to give me a headache. Once the car warms up it does dissipate. The dealer diagnosed it as fuel lines leaking under the intake manifold. With parts and labor the bill is almost $1000. After doing some "research" online it appears that this a more widespread issue with subaru's, it even resulted in a recall of some wrxs in some states... I can't believe that subaru is not issuing a tsb or recall on other similar vehicles.

Traveling at highway speeds (~75 mph) during the morning rush hour on the highway, experienced sudden loss of throttle control and resulting deceleration. The check engine light glowed steady and the cruise light was flashing. After pulling off to the shoulder (across three lanes) and shutting the engine off and restarting the engine, throttle control resumed.check engine light still glows steady and the cruise light is flashing with the cruise control not working.

As i was driving, i all of a sudden lost all power and control from the gas pedal.the car decelerated and i was only able to idle forward.the gas pedal became completely unresponsive.i turned the car off and restarted it.the check engine light is on and the cruise control light blinks but the car drives fine until the the problem happens again.there is no way to predict it.i'm glad it has not happened in the middle of an intersection or a more dangerous situation where decelerating that quickly was more dangerous.the car is in motion on city streets when this happens.i believe the check engine code reading is p2138.

There is smell of gas in the cabin , this is a 2.5 turbo model which increases danger of fire.i noticed other subarus from different years and models having same problem and even being recalled, so i suspect this is the same or similarfuel leak problem.hope they recognize this and fix it!

Return fuel line leak. The leak is on the drivers side on top of the engine. A small rubber hose shrinks in the cold allowing fuel to leak on the engine block. A strong smell of fuel in the cabin when stationary. Leak goes away when the engine is warm. This problem has been reported in other subaru models. I have repaired the problem once before as well as the previous owner of the car, and now it needs to be repaired again.

Strong raw gasoline smell in and around engine, as well as throughout the cabin when outside temperature drops to below 60 degrees (f).

The cabin is flooded with the smell of raw gasoline on cold days due to the same defect that caused a recall for the early 2000's subaru impreza wrx's.this defect is also present in the forester and the legacy, just read the forums.on turbo charged cars this can lead to a fire and on all cars it bathes the occupants in gasoline vapor as the leak occurs just outside the fresh air intake.this is more than just the scent of gasoline.turning on the air blower pulls in enough vapors to make my eyes water.the vapors persist until about 45mph which means driving with the windows open in the winter.

On approximately 10 occasions right after a rain when i start up the car the engine light starts blinking and the car runs roughly with little power. After a short time the car power returns but the check engine light stays on for about a week. Once the light goes out the car then runs normal until the next rainstorm. It then does the same all over.

Please refer to code p2138 - throttle/pedal position sensor switch with "d"/"e" voltage correlation dtc severity 2 of 3 repair -- i believe elaine chao should be made aware of the safety issues affecting the general public regarding this dangerous issue -- my subaru outback accelerator will shut down on the highway almost every day. Subaru is aware that this is a pervasive problem affecting thousands of subarus and should be forced to issue a recall. I'll be going 75 mph and then suddenly there will be no power and the car will coast to a stop in the middle of the highway. This then shuts down everyone on i35 and i almost get hit from behind multiple times a week.

My 2005 outback is very unsafe to drive under certain conditions. After extensive research online, i have discovered people use the term "ghost walking" to describe the issue. After driving over a bump or slick spot on the road, the driver momentarily loses control of the vehicle. The back end sways side to side and the car can jump several feet to the left or right. I have noticed this problem several times but it was drastically worse today. Driving on a straight, dry stretch of interstate, i drove over an icy patch under a bridge. My vehicle jumped to the left several feet and into the other lane. Had there been a car next to me, there most likely would have been an accident. I was traveling at approximately 40 mph as i had already experienced several incidents driving over large bumps. The issue seems to be worse when there is cargo in the back and on icy or bumpy roads. This seems to be a problem with numerous outbacks model year 2005 through 2009. This is extremely unsafe behavior and it needs to be addressed. I do not intend to drive my vehicle much longer and i would hesitate to buy another outback for fear of a similar issue.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. While the vehicle was parked on an incline, it rolled away. The contact jumped back into the vehicle to stop it from rolling. There was no warning indicator illuminated. The failure recurred several times. The dealer was not called. The manufacturer was made aware of the failure and stated that there was no recall. The failure was not diagnosed or repaired. The failure mileage was approximately 140,000.

On two separate occasions, my 2005 subaru outback got stuck after incurring a minor obstruction (several inches of snow in one case and a somewhat sharp incline in another case) while driving in high altitudes (10,000 ft to 11,500 ft). On both occasions, the car suddenly lost most of its power and no wheels would turn. Despite pressing the accelerator to the floor, the engine never went above 2000 rpms. Fortunately, on both occasions, there were people around to push the car. Once the tires were totally free of any obstruction, normal engine power returned and the car could be driven.i took the subaru to my home dealership in olathe ks (jack miller) on june 29, 2005, a couple weeks after the first incident. Dealer said he could not replicate the problem , so he could not fix it. The invoice notes: "2000 rpm is appox torque converter stall speed."following the second problem on july 20, i took my car to john elway subaru west in golden co.dealer invoice says:" if tires were not spinning, car had traction and was not able to build boost at altitude to produce power." dealer, however, said they could not replicate the inability to build boost, and were thus unable to fix the car.i filed a verbal complaint with subaru of america on july 27 and followed up on july 29. As of then, subaru of america was still trying to contact the dealer.subaru markets its cars as having superior performance in the mountains, snow and in difficult driving conditions. Subaru enjoys a large market share in the colorado mountains, where both my "not able to build boost" problems occurred. My car cannot be safely driven in the co mountains, particularly on mountain passes or dirt roads, because help may not be available to get the car running again. I do not know if my experiences are isolated or part of a larger problem. In either case, i am disappointed that subaru has been unwilling or unable to fix this potentially serious safety issue.

I have had issues with my power train since purchase of the car.i have done both cv axles twice.the last time the control arms had to be replaced.ball joints have been twice.the shop i took my car to said they have seen this same issue in 4 other subaru's of the same year.during repair my drive knuckles broke.i have spend thousand on just my power train.between subaru dealership, burt brother, and premier auto, i want to make an official complaint and ask you to look into these issue.all of these companies have advised me to place this complaint.

Both rear wheel bearing hubs went bad between 55k and 58k miles.they were fixed with a replacement part. They caused a loud noise while driving.

My subaru (and others '05-'09) have serious computer issues causing the car to stall out in the middle of traffic.i got the car special edition of consumer reports and the article below is no joke.subaru outback '05-'09 have gotten terrible reviews for the following:major engine issue and drive issues and more. The dealer and headquarters will not acknowledge that there may be a serious need for a recall.when disconnecting and reconnecting the battery, the car will stall out the next day in the middle of traffic. Car ran but then stalled out in the middle of traffic. I was able to get it off the road eventually and take it to the dealership. The dealership did not want to acknowledge the issue and wanted to charge me $200 for diagnosis. I do not feel safe driving my car because i need to get a new battery ($225 at subaru which i can't afford and $119 at firestone), however, firestone does not have the memory stick subaru does and i run a very good chance of stalling out in traffic after the work is done at a non subaru dealership. Neither the dealer nor headquarters will acknowledge this article that this safety issue has happened to others too. This is very unsafe for me and others on the road here is an article which describes exactly what happened to me. A recall needs to be involved and subaru must be waiting for a major accident to happen.i am not willing to put my life on the line anymore by driving this unsafe vehicle. This article provides exactly what is going on.http://www.computerworld.com/article/2467230/enterprise-applications/please-don-t-reboot-the-subaru.htmlsubaru hq lost the email twice and i am very afraid to drive this car.austin subaru and subaru headquarters acted like they remedied the situation by cleaning a different part.

This was one of the first snows of the winter and i was driving my 2005 subaru outback down detroit freeways to metro airport to pickup my son.i had my wife in the front seat and my youngest son in the rear seat.as the snow began to fall i felt the car lurch back and forth as if i were driving through icy or snowy ruts.i am an experienced driver (50 years old) and had never experienced anything like this except during an ice storm, etc.i thought the road must have had "black ice" under the snow as my car was almost uncontrollable.i slowed down to about 30mph and, to my surprise, saw two wheel drive pickup trucks, etc. Passing me at 10 - 20mph faster than i was going...everyone was passing our car as i when i tried to match their speed it seemed that i was going to lose control with the rear end having a mind of its own shifting back and forth. In the months that followed, i searched the internet and found the threads calling this phenomenon "ghostwalking".i hope that nhtsa does something about this as i do not want anyone to get hurt or killed thinking that this car is a great snow car (from a ground clearance and awd standpoint) and finding out the hard way that it is not.it would appear that it is worse when the suspension is loaded down with more passengers, as it was in this instance, than when it is just the driver and no cargo in the hatch area.

I have been experiencing a problem while accelerating from a stop or from coasting, such as when a red light has just turned green. I begin to depress the accelerator and the engine just about dies. This has nearly caused me to get "t-boned" at intersections numerous times. I have brought it to the attention of two different subaru dealers and they say that nothing is wrong with it. I have heard that other subaru owners are having this problem but subaru will not admit that this is a safety issue.

Intermittent throttle disabled.car becomes unresponsive to the gas pedal.engine continues to run but gas pedal has no response.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback.intermittently, the rear of the vehicle loses control in slick road conditions.the contact stated that there was mechanical failure with the electronics in the all wheel drive.the failure occurs while driving between 20-45 mph.the dealer was unable to duplicate the failure.the tires were replaced twice.the vehicle was realigned, but the failure still persists.the current mileage was 25,800 and failure mileage was 12,000.

I have a 2005 subaru outback wagon.this weekend, on hard packed ice roads, the back wheels would "float", sway out from under my vehicle.this has happened previously in black ice conditions.i was traveling 20 mph slower than the rest of traffic to maintain control of my vehicle, and thus creating an additional hazard to the vehicles that could handle the conditions.the below email thread is a good description of what i have experienced in the past and other subaru outback owners are experiencing as well.the vehicle has new tires and the alignment was recently verified.thanks,cale streeterhttp://www.subaruoutback.org/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=11267&perpage=20&pagenumber=32.

2005 subaru outback will not track straight in slippery conditions at all.the term 'ghost walking' is being used for this and is very accurate.i do not feel secure driving in any snowy conditions in this vehicle.i had a 1995 subaru before this that was rock steady in snow, this car is very unpredictable.tire changes do not solve problem nor does alignment to oem specs.has been on going since i bought the car new.

Premature wheel bearing failure of both front wheel bearings.resulted in loud humming from front end of vehicle but was repaired prior to any safety issue.

We have a 2005 subaru outback that sways in the rear of car under the following conditions 1. Over bumps the rear will swing to the rightand dip. When roads are slick it will almost spin the vehicle. If you are in a left hand curve, even at low speed, the condition is exaggerated more than you would expect sort of like it was pushed in addition to the normal inertia you would experience. 2. Rear end traction becomes unstable under icy conditions where it appears that too much power is being distributed to the rear of the driveline then oscillating to each individual rear wheel. In my opinion 100% of the vehicles power concentrated to the rear differential is alternately distributed between the rear wheels and kind of gets stuck in this mode.

I own a 2005 subaru outback 2.5i wagon.at 44000 miles (26 months) the rear wheels were making a lot of noise at both low and high speeds.upon inspection it was found both wheel bearings had to be replaced or they would have soon failed.

2005 subaru outback legacy station wagonthe limited slip differential (rear) malfunctions under wet or snowy conditions.it begins a rhythmic transfer of power back and forth until the rear of the vehicle loses traction and then spins out...this has happened several times and has been taken to the dealership for diagnostics and repairs.they have performed alignments but indicate that they cannot duplicate the complaint... So, they say there is no problem.we have taken the vehicle in to the dealership without any repair made to resolve this dangerous fault.the repair would involve replacing the entire unit (lsd)... Because parts are not available separately...we have had it looked at by an independent repair facility and they were able to duplicate the complaint...we have replaced the original "potenza" tires with an aggressive all weather tire hoping to remedy the problem...subaru will not admit that there is a problem with the limited slip differential on this 2005 outback!we would like to have this taken care of before someone is injured or killed.thanks!

Dt:the consumer stated that when someone was sitting in the rear middle seat, the seat belt would unlock the left seat belt.the service dealer stated that they would inform the manufacturer of the issue, they did submitt a complaint, but it may take up to 6 months before the problem could be corrected.the consumer searched different vehicles for the same make/model and they all had the same type of seat belts.*sc

Rear passenger safety belts do not extend sufficiently when child seat is installed in central position for 05 model compared to older models.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. While pulling out of the driveway at 10 mph, the brake pedal traveled to the floor when it was depressed. The parking brake had to be applied to stop the vehicle. There were no warning indicators illuminated. The contact looked under the vehicle and noticed that all four brake lines failed. The vehicle was serviced per nhtsa campaign number: 14v311000 (service brakes); however, the remedy failed to repair the recall. The vehicle was towed to the local dealer. The local dealer (cascade auto group, 4149 state rd, cuyahoga falls, oh, 44223) diagnosed that the brake line was leaking where the recall repair was performed. The vehicle was not repaired. The manufacturer was contacted and provided case number: 1-25871335589. The manufacturer stated that the dealer was unwilling to assist with the repair cost and that the dealer cited the vehicle as having high mileage and a time sensitive recall. The manufacturer offered $500 towards the repair bill. The failure mileage was approximately 215,000.

I was driving home from work on the highway when i pressed the brake pedalas normal to slow down and the pedal went soft and i had no brakes. I was able to make it home using the emergency brake to stop. Upon inspection the lines were leaking from the same place repaired in recall wqk47, nhtsa campaign 14v311000. Visual inspection could confirm that the initial recall wqk47 repair completely failed causing serious danger to my life. I researched complaints about wqk47 recall and came to the conclusion that i am not the only subaru owner with this serious life threatening issue. I called my dealership and even spoke with corporate subaruand both said since recall was performed once repair/replacement will cost me. I cannot fathom why, if the first recall repair failed resulting in a life threatening situation, subaru wouldn't want to immediately fix the problem and ensure all their customers who had this recall performed are still safe and functioning to proper standards.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact stated that while driving at approximately 30 mph and pressing the brake pedal to slow the vehicle down, the brake pedal extended to the floorboard and the vehicle did not immediately stop. The driver had to use the emergency brake to stop the vehicle. The vehicle was towed to an independent mechanic who diagnosed that the brake lines had failed do to excessive corrosion. The brake lines were replaced and the failure was remedied. The manufacturer and local dealer north town subaru of buffalo, new york were notified of the failure but no assistance was offered. The contact indicated that the vehicle was serviced in the january of 2015 under the nhtsa campaign number: 14v311000 (service brakes, hydraulic) and the brake lines were rustproofed with anti-corrosion wax but the failure still occurred. The failure mileage was 183,000.

Subaru outback 2005:the wire harness to the rear tailgate failed and shorted out the brake lights and reverse lights, creating a safety hazard while driving.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact stated that the vehicle was repaired per nhtsa campaign number: 14v311000 (service brakes, hydraulic); however, the remedy failed. When the brake pedal was depressed, the brake light fractured and brake fluid was leaking. The vehicle was towed to an independent mechanic who stated that the brake line was corroded. The vehicle was not repaired. The vehicle was towed to byers dublin subaru (2455 billingsley rd, columbus, oh 43235, (614) 792-2455), but no assistance was provided. The contact had been calling the dealer, but was not getting a response. The manufacturer was made aware of the failure and informed the contact that the vehicle was inspected by an independent contractor. All brake lines were replaced. The failure mileage was 255,081.*cw

4way connector brake line leaking causing no brakes. Could of got in serious accidenthazzard to drivecalled about recall on this but the said my car vin number was not listed and we're very rude and she hung up on me. Had to put car in nutral to slow diwn

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. While the vehicle was stopped at a light, the brake pedal was depressed and traveled to the floorboard. The vehicle was not diagnosed or repaired. The vehicle was serviced per nhtsa campaign number: 14v311000 (service brakes, hydraulic), but the remedy failed to repair the vehicle. The manufacturer was made aware of the failure and stated that the recall had expired. The failure mileage was approximately 192,000. The vin was not available.

Purchased used october 2018 . Received recall notice in mail and took to dealership november 2018 . Recall was for driver airbag and rear brake line corrosion. Airbag was replaced at that time and brake line was alledged to be inspected and coated . Apr 2019 car pulled in front of vehicle and brakes were applied hard and rear brake line blew . No accident . Car was towed to local mechanic and due to their knowledge of previous recall repairs was advised to car subaru directly . Subaru was called and they advised to take back to dealership . The car was again towed . Subaru reference number 1-43591235818. Dealership claimed repairs were allegedly done and that subaru would not contribute to current situation . I contest that repairs were not properly done . It was easier to allegedly spray coating than to do repairs that were needed . Coating a brake line that is already corroded is not a proper repair . Photograph clearly shows this fact .

The vehicle has soft brakes, it is common among this generation. It does not matter if everything is replaced. There is still a long/soft pedal travel. This may be due to an inadequate master cylinder size or brake booster size. This is a constant issue, does not matter when you use the brakes, it always is slow to stop and can be a bit scary.

My outback developed a brake line leak.the leak was located is the same location that was inspected and rust proofed per nhtsa campaign: 14v-311000, service campaign wqk47.the leak was discover after my 16 son lost mostof brakes while in motion.luckily there was not a serious crash as a result of the brake pedal going all the way to the floor board.the brake lines were repaired for $336. This recall was ineffective and the brake lines should have been better protected against corrosion.

On december 18, 2014 the day was clear; there had been no rain or snow that week. The pavement was dry. At the point of the issue i was in stop and go traffic, thus had used my brakes at an average of 12-18 times since i had left the house that morning. Traffic was maybe moving at 20-25 miles an hour, stop and go. At one point i went to apply my brakes at a normal pressure and they started to pulse in the 'anti-lock' fashion. The pulses were exceptionally long, between braking (pulsing), nothing like i had ever experience before with this car or any other vehicle. However i kept my foot applied to the brake and did not try to pulse it myself. Before i was able to get the car stopped it hit the car in front of me. I had about 1 and + car lengths between us, again only rolling and absolutely could not get the car stopped. The collision was not hard enough to deploy the airbag on either cars. The 2012 ford escape in front had nearly no damage to the rear bumper, however due to the placement of the ford's bumper to my grill, my repairs were $5,534.67. My fear is it happening again. Due to the make of the car my insurance company can't access the electronic information on the day of the accident. Thus they will not be part of my complaint that i have filed with subaru of america, filed 3/24/14. I done research on the subrau's abs system. I found that people have been disconecting their abs due to this issue. Including finding youtube videos on how to do it.the issue is obvious if this is what people feel safer with than the subaru factory abs system. Subaru's claim department has no interest in investigating it without my insurance being part of the claim, even thought i am a customer of their product that is defective. Obviously this is not a customers claims department. Who will handle my claim if the next incident i am severely injured or worse yet?

I have a 2005 subaru outback that had a recall for break line rusting. Recall #wqk-47. The breaks no longer work do to being completely rusted out. The dealer tells me the repair is impossible to complete and therefore the car is inoperable. The dealer and corporate subaru claim that they have no obligation to repair, replace or reimburse for this car. I believe the rusted breaks are covered by the recall and the car is inoperable solely because of the breaks. Is subaru legally obligated to correct this issue or not?

Brake system failure due to brake line corrosion ; driving vehicle and brakes failed, leaving me without ability to stop. Luckily i was on a hardly-traveled road and getting home was uphill.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact statedthat the brake line was rusted. Due to the rust, brake fluid leaked from the brakes, which made it hard to stop the vehicle. The contact called john kennedy subaru (1201 e ridge pike, plymouth meeting, pa 19462, (610) 278-5000) and was informed that an unknown recall had expired; therefore, the contact would be responsible for the repair cost. The manufacturer was not made aware of the failure. The failure mileage was 182,000.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. While the vehicle was in reverse with the brake pedal depressed and extended to the floorboard, the vehicle continued to drive in reverse. Upon inspection, it was discovered that brake fluid leaked from the brake lines and was present on the floor near the rear passenger wheel. The vehicle was towed to subaru of newport news (783 j clyde morris blvd, newport news, va) where it was diagnosed that the brake lines were damaged due to corrosion. The vehicle was not repaired. The manufacturer was not notified. The contact was informed that the vehicle was not included in nhtsa campaign number: 14v311000 (service brakes). The contact indicated that the vehicle experienced the same failure listed in the recall. The failure mileage was 183,000.

Recall was issued a few years agofor defect in the brake line allowing salt water to get in and cause corrosion to brake lines. Brought to dealership and brake lines were sprayed with an anti corrosive. On 7/29/18, brake line was leaking and lost all brake prsssure while driving due to a corroded brake line.

The rear brake lines have become rusted and have holes in them due to corrosion.

Takata recall. The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact received notification of nhtsa campaign numbers: 15v323000 (air bags) and 14v311000 (service brakes, hydraulic); however, the parts to do the repairs were unavailable. The contact stated that the manufacturer exceeded a reasonable amount of time for the recall repairs. The dealer (serra subaru of traverse city, 1747 s garfield ave, traverse city, mi) was contacted and confirmed that the parts were not available for the recall remedies. The manufacturer was notified and was not able to confirm when the parts were to become available. The contact had not experienced a failure. Parts distribution disconnect.

Brakes are very weak for the first couple of stops after the car has been sitting for a while (about eight hours or more).brakes work fine after warming up.this is very dangerous when first backing out of driving; would not be able to stop fast enough if a child or person was suddenly in the way and you needed to stop.this is the case with oem brake pads and after-market pads.

Component:service brakes, brake pads, details: the brake pads on my 2005 subaru have warped (all 4) at 18,000 miles producing an uneven sensation as one is braking.it also increases the distance required to stop. After taking my subaru in for a brake inspection (at 20,000 miles)i was told that all 4 wheels needed new brake pads, (even though my front brakes have 60% braking efficiency & 70% on the rear brakes).my partner, who is a professional driver, is the sole driver of our subaru and is very rarely in stop-and-go traffic.on the few occasions when she is in heavy traffic she maintains extra distance between her vehicle and the vehicle in front of her to avoid having to use her brakes more then is absolutely necessary.neither one of us have ever had to replace the brake pads on a vehicle with mileage as low as 20,000 miles and both of us have lived in large cities all of our lives.i had a similar problem on a 2000 subaru forester.this is a definite safety issue.subaru, overall, makes reliable, responsive and safe vehicles but this issue needs to be dealt with before someone is seriously injured or killed.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact stated that after starting the vehicle, the brake warning light remained illuminated and the brake pedal extended to the floor while depressed. Upon inspection, the contact discovered brake fluid had leaked from the rear passengerā€™s side wheel area. Further inspection revealed rusting and corrosion of the brake lines. The cause of the failure was not yet determined. The local dealer and manufacturer were notified of the failure. The contact was informed that the vehicle was not included in the nhtsa campaign number: 13v110000 (service brakes, hydraulic). The failure mileage was 150,000.

The contact owned a 2005 subaru outback. The contact stated that the brakes failed to engage and the vehicle crashed into a tree and caught fire. The air bags did not deploy. Fourpeople were injured and police and fire reports were filed. A month prior to the accident, the vehicle was inspected and no failures were found. The vehicle was inspected after the crash and it was discovered that the tumbler system was defective. The vin was unavailable at the time of the complaint. The current and failure mileages were unknown. Updated 7/16/10 updated 07/27/10

The abs on my 2005 subaru outback 2.5i limited is too sensitive. It is dangerous driving in the snow because the abs kicks in too easily and it takes way too long to stop. I have recently gotten new tires with an excellent rating and that didn't help. Bumps in the road also set off the abs too easily leading to scary situations.i drive other vehicles with abs and this does not occur.i am not confident driving this vehicle in the snow, which is ironic because it is an awd subaru (which is supposed to have an excellent reputation).abs is supposed to benefit the driver, not help create a collision.

At around 14,000 miles the dealer told me the rotors had warped and needed to be turned. Again at about 22,000 i was told the rotors had warped and needed to be turned. I was told this was due to heavy braking, stop and go traffic or riding the brakes. I have another car with over 100,000 miles on it and the rotors have never needed to be turned, my driving habits not the cause of this problem. Subaru has not gotten back to me in over 2 months about this problem. I think this could be a very dangerous problem with this car.

The brake rotors on my 2005 subaru have warped (all 4) at 14,000 miles producing a violent pulsating pedal and inefficient braking.this alone could cause some drivers to allow for insufficient braking distances causing a crash. It is now my understanding, after some investigation, that this is a "common" problem with this manufacturer for many years.the subaru dealer cut the rotors under warranty but this should never have occurred at 14,000 miles.

While driving on slippery surfaces like ice and snow, the vehicle will begin swaying left and right uncontrollably. The sensation, also known as "ghost walking" could easily cause an accident if the driver can not control the swaying, and spinning out. Conditions of problem: driving during winter conditions, on snowy roads and highways. The vehicle is fine under dry/normal conditions. I believe the issue stems from the awd system.

I am a very experienced driver in snowy and icy conditions.my outback 2005 2.5i started wiggling out of control (especially felt the back end wiggle left to right) on a straight road with approx 1/2 inch ice and packed snow causing me to slow down from approximately 40 mph to 20 mph .other 2 wd vehicles passed us at much higher speeds with no apparent problem to keep straight.our car had 2 adults and 2 small children in it with skiing gear.changed our winter tires immediately after.the problem occurred again on a few other similar occasions, for which i went to the dealer to get aligned, tire changed again.went to dealer in 2010 after this occurred again on the highway with only slush and water.i had to slow from 55 mph to 30 mph to keep car in control.remember this is on the highway!!went to dealer again to re-align the car which according to them was not aligned.the problem re-occurred again this winter.i am now fed up, this is a dangerous car and i am turning it in to buy a new car. I can't understand why subaru is not recalling to fix the rear suspension.

I reside in the sierra nevada mountains in california and experience snowy/icy driving conditions regularly throughout the winter.the outback was purchased for its performance in these conditions and is equipped with blizzak studless snow tires.on several occasions, in both ca and co, while driving on packed snow at approximately 40 mph, the rear end began to fishtale out of control.this situation continued to worsen until the speed was reduced to below 30 mph.i have spoken to the dealer and of course, "they have never heard of such an event" and did not have any idea as to what may have caused this condition nor how to correct.there are too many reports of this identical out of control condition for it to be coincidental, subaru needs to address this issue before someone is seriously injured or killed.

While driving on snowpacked dirt roads to town, i reached a straightaway where, unknown to me, ice had formed over the snow. Driving straight at 30-35 mph, the back end suddenly began to track to the right. I turned the steering wheel to the right and pressed the gas pedal to correct, but this had no effect. I was unable to regain control, and the vehicle slid into the ditch, resulting in damage to the vehicle and minor injury to myself.

While driving on straight, flat and level ice-covered northern indiana road at 35 mph, my 2005 subaru outback xt ltd fishtailed (rear over-steer) repeatedly.this felt as if the rear of the vehicle was being quickly pushed from side to side.(this is often referred to as "ghostwalking" and is unmistakable once experienced.)there were two average weight adults in the front seats and one young adult (135 lbs) in the rear passenger seat.the vehicle received a four-wheel alignment two years ago and does not exhibit any alignment-related issues on dry pavement.i.e., doesn't pull to left or right, nor wear tires unevenly.the vehicle is equipped in winter with bridgestone blizzak ws60 215/55 r17 tires with approx. 75% of their tread remaining.(these tires show no signs of abnormal wear or other defects.)i am a driver with 37 years of driving experience and believe this is a very serious safety issue with this vehicle.i've never experienced this degree of unpredictable instability in any vehicle that i've driven on ice.this vehicle gives the operator the impression that it is very sure-footed in any other condition, leading the operator to approach all road conditions with a level of confidence that can (and does) result in nearly out-of-control situations when the vehicle is driven on ice.

2005 subaru outback wagon extremely unstable on slippery roads.unsafe to drive at any speed under certain conditions.has been termed 'ghost walking'.this problem can be fixed / helped with wheel alignment, but should not be such a dangerous vehicle because of an alignment problem.some other factors have to be contributing to the horrific handling of this vehicle on slippery roads.it is not a matter of just slowing down.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback.while driving 40 mph, the rear of the vehicle began to sway from side to side.if the contact drove more than 40 mph, the vehicle would fail again.the vehicle is currently being inspected by the dealer.the cause of the failure has not yet been determined.the manufacturer stated that there were no current recalls on the vehicle; therefore, no compensation would be provided.the failure and current mileages were 36,875.

My 2005 outback is very unsafe to drive under certain conditions. After extensive research online, i have discovered people use the term "ghost walking" to describe the issue. After driving over a bump or slick spot on the road, the driver momentarily loses control of the vehicle. The back end sways side to side and the car can jump several feet to the left or right. I have noticed this problem several times but it was drastically worse today. Driving on a straight, dry stretch of interstate, i drove over an icy patch under a bridge. My vehicle jumped to the left several feet and into the other lane. Had there been a car next to me, there most likely would have been an accident. I was traveling at approximately 40 mph as i had already experienced several incidents driving over large bumps. The issue seems to be worse when there is cargo in the back and on icy or bumpy roads. This seems to be a problem with numerous outbacks model year 2005 through 2009. This is extremely unsafe behavior and it needs to be addressed. I do not intend to drive my vehicle much longer and i would hesitate to buy another outback for fear of a similar issue.

My 2005 subaru outback 2.5xt has a bad rear end sway while driving over slick spots on the highway, feeling like the car is going to loose control.

I was pulling into a parking space and put on the brake. Vehicle didn't respond to braking and kept going, over the,curb, across the median and hit 5 parked cars before it stopped.

Purchased 2005 outback in april 2012 with approximately 190000 miles.car felt very unstable when going over any uneven road surface.replaced rear struts with no improvement.tried different tires with no noticeable change.decided it must be an odd but normal condition for the vehicle.today, 9/18/12, drove car in light rain along a 2-lane road at approximately 50-55 mph and car was very unstable in the rear.the rear "steered" left/right and felt very unstable.there was a sense the vehicle was going to abruptly cross into the other lane.i have over 40 years of driving experience and realize this is not normal vehicle performance. I live in a central ny and purchased this vehicle for the safety of all wheel drive after owning a 1995 subaru impreza and a 1997 subaru outback. Given the situation i had today, i am afraid of what will happen in ice/snow conditions common in ny.i began to research the issue online in an attempt to correct my situation before winter arrives.i found many online concerns regarding this issue.while i have not yet approached subaru directly, i get an overwhelming sense from online comments that subaru will not be very helpful.i am making this safety complaint in hopes that multiple complaints combined will expose what i feel is a very serious/dangerous handling issue with a 2005 subaru outback.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. While driving approximately 35 mph, the battery warning indicator illuminated and the steering wheel seized, which required excessive force. The failure recurred once. The vehicle was towed to the dealer who stated that the alternator bolt fractured. The vehicle was repaired. The manufacturer was not notified of the failure. The approximate failure mileage was 120,000.

I have a 2005 subaru outback.on several occasions, driving on hard-packed snow and/or ice/glaze on the highway i have found it nearly impossible to drive the car at traffic speeds without the rear end losing grip and sliding side to side.it feels like it's very windy, and you're about to lose control.except that it's not windy.the car just seems to lose traction in the rear wheels.we've had to slow down to around 30 mph while semi-trucks, regular fwd and even rwd vehicles blew by us.i've driven in these wintry conditions for 35 years without this sort of issue.i've owned a 1997 outback and never experienced this sort of issue.but this 2005 is scary if the road conditions are just right (wrong). This is a definite safety hazard and while i love the car in many other ways i will probably need to get rid of it.

In comparison with many trucks and cars i have driven in winter conditions for over 30 years, our 2005 suburu outback is much more unstable especially in the rear end whenever hard packed snow or ice is encountered even at moderate speeds (30-50 mph).at least once this cause the vehicle to spin uncontrollably.in identical conditions, a truck in 2wd (i have several trucks on my ranch) is far more stable.there is a clear safety problem with this vehicle for which tires, inflation, alignment according to manufacturers specs fails to cure.

Wires passing through rear hatch to rear lift gate crack and break from opening and closing. Rear lift gate lock not working, wire is broken in two. Wires for rear lights are cracking and about to sever as well.

This is the first subaru i've ever owned and so far it's been a nightmare.i have had to repair: an oil leak in the engine that required the whole engine to be taken apart.while replacing a seemingly simple part, the hydraulic lifts that keep the back hatch open, the threading that holds the screw in broke off and i had to hire a mechanic yet again to weld that part to be able to screw in the screw to hold the lift in place.and now, the entire interior lighting doesn't work, including the stereo, all the dome lights and the remote control system.in addition to that, the rear wiper doesn't work properly.

Soon after purchasing the car, i realized that the rear wiper was not functioning.after checking an online owners forum i found that there is a common problem with the functions in the rear lift gate such as inoperable brake lights, rear wipers inoperable, and other items.this problem seems to be caused by the degradation of wire insulation and breakage of wire.upon further investigation i discovered my own vehicle has a severed wire located in the accordion boot on the right (passenger) side near the hinge for the lift gate.this could result is serious safety issues.as with any faulty electrical wiring there is also a risk for fire associated with this issue.

I was pulling into a parking space and put on the brake. Vehicle didn't respond to braking and kept going, over the,curb, across the median and hit 5 parked cars before it stopped.

I own a subaru outback and live in bemidji minnesota--land of below zero winter temperatures.today i was nailed in the head yet again by the tailgate door of my car.you see, the struts that support the tailgate door do not function when its really cold outside--like approaching 0 degrees fahrenheit or lower.when temperatures are warmer--about 20 degrees above zero--the struts function as usual.but when it is extremely cold, the struts do not work and the door falls freely onto your head or whatever is in the way.this has been an ongoing issue with this car since i purchased it in july 2006.this is an obvious design defect that could lead to an injury.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact was driving approximately 10 mph and heard a rattling noise coming the front driver side door. The failure occurred at any speed being traveled. The vehicle was taken to an authorized dealer for inspection. The failure was contributed to a broken door bar weld. The technician recommended that the vehicle would be taken to an auto body collision center to be repaired. The failure mileage was approximately 77,000.

This was one of the first snows of the winter and i was driving my 2005 subaru outback down detroit freeways to metro airport to pickup my son.i had my wife in the front seat and my youngest son in the rear seat.as the snow began to fall i felt the car lurch back and forth as if i were driving through icy or snowy ruts.i am an experienced driver (50 years old) and had never experienced anything like this except during an ice storm, etc.i thought the road must have had "black ice" under the snow as my car was almost uncontrollable.i slowed down to about 30mph and, to my surprise, saw two wheel drive pickup trucks, etc. Passing me at 10 - 20mph faster than i was going...everyone was passing our car as i when i tried to match their speed it seemed that i was going to lose control with the rear end having a mind of its own shifting back and forth. In the months that followed, i searched the internet and found the threads calling this phenomenon "ghostwalking".i hope that nhtsa does something about this as i do not want anyone to get hurt or killed thinking that this car is a great snow car (from a ground clearance and awd standpoint) and finding out the hard way that it is not.it would appear that it is worse when the suspension is loaded down with more passengers, as it was in this instance, than when it is just the driver and no cargo in the hatch area.

While driving on straight, flat and level ice-covered northern indiana road at 35 mph, my 2005 subaru outback xt ltd fishtailed (rear over-steer) repeatedly.this felt as if the rear of the vehicle was being quickly pushed from side to side.(this is often referred to as "ghostwalking" and is unmistakable once experienced.)there were two average weight adults in the front seats and one young adult (135 lbs) in the rear passenger seat.the vehicle received a four-wheel alignment two years ago and does not exhibit any alignment-related issues on dry pavement.i.e., doesn't pull to left or right, nor wear tires unevenly.the vehicle is equipped in winter with bridgestone blizzak ws60 215/55 r17 tires with approx. 75% of their tread remaining.(these tires show no signs of abnormal wear or other defects.)i am a driver with 37 years of driving experience and believe this is a very serious safety issue with this vehicle.i've never experienced this degree of unpredictable instability in any vehicle that i've driven on ice.this vehicle gives the operator the impression that it is very sure-footed in any other condition, leading the operator to approach all road conditions with a level of confidence that can (and does) result in nearly out-of-control situations when the vehicle is driven on ice.

Was driving on the highway on june 21, 2017 with a dishwasher in the trunk. It was raining and there was traffic, so my speed was about 40 mph. As i was driving, the car abruptly swerved from right to left, and i almost hit another car. This was my scariest driving experience .

2005 subaru outback.consumer writes in regards to vehicle front and back wheel bearings nneded to be replaced.

Failure of 2 rear wheel bearings and right front wheel bearing.

Rear suspension issues cause uncontrollable steering from the rear end on snow and ice.car refuses to drive in a straight line on snow/ice even with snow tires and proper alignment.

Driving in light snow or mixture of slushy snow the vehicle rear drifts left and right at speeds of 20 mph.dangerous if the speed is exceeded. Car pass me all the time because they have not problems with the road at high speeds.i understand this is called ghost walking. The first time this happened i spun out.

2005 ob sw mt. Car is very unstable in slush or snow.car weaves from side to side resulting in driving very slowly to minimize instability.

I reside in the sierra nevada mountains in california and experience snowy/icy driving conditions regularly throughout the winter.the outback was purchased for its performance in these conditions and is equipped with blizzak studless snow tires.on several occasions, in both ca and co, while driving on packed snow at approximately 40 mph, the rear end began to fishtale out of control.this situation continued to worsen until the speed was reduced to below 30 mph.i have spoken to the dealer and of course, "they have never heard of such an event" and did not have any idea as to what may have caused this condition nor how to correct.there are too many reports of this identical out of control condition for it to be coincidental, subaru needs to address this issue before someone is seriously injured or killed.

While driving the car on a slightly snowy/slippery road with light snow falling, it felt like the rear end of the car was spinning out and i was heading off the road.i had to slow down to about 30 mph in order to stay in my lane.everyone else was flying past me.i have since had many occasions where these same conditions caused the same effects with the car.it seems to worsen when i have passengers or any extra weight in the car.when the driving conditions that cause this problem exist, i cannot drive my car, but must rent another vehicle or borrow someone else's car. We have owned other subaru outbacks of 1998 or earlier with no problems in snow.numerous times i brought this problem up with subaru corporation of america and my dealership and everyone denies there is any problem with the car.i'm totally frustrated!!

Vehicle ghostwalking while driving 40-45mph in a straight section of road. Multiple other verified issues from 2005-2009 outback vehicles exhibit the same symptoms. Almost lost control of vehicle and cannot safely travel above 45mph without losing control. Subaru has not officially acknowledged this problem or provided a solution.

First experienced what is now being called ghostwalking. Rear of the vehicle wants to break loose at any speed above 25 mph. Car has since been aligned and 4 new high end snow tires installed and is no better.

Car was purchased in september 2014.this was my first time driving this car in wet, snowy driving conditions.i had 5 passengers and twice we had the rear end of the car kind of break loose.it felt like it was swinging to the side.it scared me and the passengers in the car.i have not noticed it while driving alone.i originally suspected under inflated or poor tires, but when i checked the following day they were not bad.i went to a subaru website looking for tire recommendations and there are over 1,000 postings regarding "ghostwalking" on 2005-2009 subaru outbacks. I had never heard of this before but it appears to describe my conditions.

Car is not safe on packed snow or icy roads.all road feel is gone and it feels as if the car could spin out of control at any moment.most other cars seem to pass without issue.for a awd car this is unacceptable.you must slow down to 40 and below to have any hopes of keeping the car in a straight line.i have put nokia snow tires on the and car drives perfect in fresh snow but still cannot drive in slippery conditions.i have not noticed this on wet pavement.subaru feels like an alignment will correct the problem.going in for one in a week.if it does not fix the issue i will sell the car.i found many owners with the same issue on subaruoutback.org.

Purchased 2005 outback in april 2012 with approximately 190000 miles.car felt very unstable when going over any uneven road surface.replaced rear struts with no improvement.tried different tires with no noticeable change.decided it must be an odd but normal condition for the vehicle.today, 9/18/12, drove car in light rain along a 2-lane road at approximately 50-55 mph and car was very unstable in the rear.the rear "steered" left/right and felt very unstable.there was a sense the vehicle was going to abruptly cross into the other lane.i have over 40 years of driving experience and realize this is not normal vehicle performance. I live in a central ny and purchased this vehicle for the safety of all wheel drive after owning a 1995 subaru impreza and a 1997 subaru outback. Given the situation i had today, i am afraid of what will happen in ice/snow conditions common in ny.i began to research the issue online in an attempt to correct my situation before winter arrives.i found many online concerns regarding this issue.while i have not yet approached subaru directly, i get an overwhelming sense from online comments that subaru will not be very helpful.i am making this safety complaint in hopes that multiple complaints combined will expose what i feel is a very serious/dangerous handling issue with a 2005 subaru outback.

Had the car for about a year now. Driven it thru some snow and have experienced what is know as the "ghost walking issue". The rear end tends to wander back and forth while driving on slushy snow and on ice. Also does this when one rear wheel goes in a pot hole especially when driving on an off ramp. Car has been aligned at the dealer and has new tires as well. These things were done to fix the issue but it did not. Car is all stock. Car is dangerous to drive in the above conditions. This car was bought for our daughter to drive back and forth to college and now we don't dare let her drive it. There have been many complaints about this issue on subaru sites like subaru.org that i am surprised nothing has been done. We are getting rid of car as soon as we can because of this main reason.

My 2005 outback is very unsafe to drive under certain conditions. After extensive research online, i have discovered people use the term "ghost walking" to describe the issue. After driving over a bump or slick spot on the road, the driver momentarily loses control of the vehicle. The back end sways side to side and the car can jump several feet to the left or right. I have noticed this problem several times but it was drastically worse today. Driving on a straight, dry stretch of interstate, i drove over an icy patch under a bridge. My vehicle jumped to the left several feet and into the other lane. Had there been a car next to me, there most likely would have been an accident. I was traveling at approximately 40 mph as i had already experienced several incidents driving over large bumps. The issue seems to be worse when there is cargo in the back and on icy or bumpy roads. This seems to be a problem with numerous outbacks model year 2005 through 2009. This is extremely unsafe behavior and it needs to be addressed. I do not intend to drive my vehicle much longer and i would hesitate to buy another outback for fear of a similar issue.

I have an 2005 outback xt.this car is dangerous on packed snow.i am a very experienced winter driver and have never had a vehicle handle this "loosely" on snow.above approx 40mph the back end wants to snap around even on flat, straight roads without the being on the accelerator or brake.after the first incident in 06, i was told by the mechanic it was due to uneven tire wear and an alignment issue.so after only 15k miles, i replaced the tires and had the car aligned.years later, i am now convinced that the "ghostwalking" issue caused these other issues and was not the result of them.i have since replaced the shocks/struts and use studded snow tires in the winter.this has helped, but the problem seems to come back erratically.it always occurs at highway speeds and now is sometimes even felt on wet freeways.i personally know of three other 05 outback owners in my neighborhood that have all experienced the "ghostwalking" problem at some point.i have previously owned a 92 legacy wagon and a 96 impreza and both were outstanding on snow, even without snow tires.the 05 outback has a serious safety issue that needs to be further examined before someone is seriously injured or killed.

I am the third owner so after my problems, i researched to learn the first owner couldn't maintain tire life; subaru replaced all four tires and kept trying realignment for her. The second owner informed me he could not maintain new tire life, never acknowledging to me that thecar is all over the road and a hazard to your life.being the third owner, i never thoughtwhen i purchased this 2005 subaru outback that it could be an engineering problem with a company like subaru, not identified or recalled. I have learned the car is unsafe and after research online have learned there could be a serious engineering problem with the raised rear suspension. I have the subaru receipts from former two owners (they were related) and obviously subaru is negligent in not identifying the issue and reporting it. Two different shops have assured me it is not ball joints, or suspension, etc. I spent $750 on the rearend and new alignment at the specialty spring and suspension shop and those tires seem to be wearing evenly.the front tires are cupped on the outside severely in six months. The car is all over the road.

Car is very unstable on snowy road surfaces and fishtails from side to side.other vehicles on the road do not experience this problem.this incident has occurred many times during winter driving conditions.we have new snow tires and four wheel alignment yet the problem persists.car instability is very dangerous and we are concerned for our safety.we have contacted the subaru dealer and subaru directly yet no one seems to know what the problem is.

On any wet or snowy pavement car is ghost walking, like the rear end has marbles under it. Speed of 35 mph, straight driving, on wet pavement.like a cat walking on its nails.terrified. Had alignment, new tires, new rear struts, sway bar, transmission wiring harness. Disabled abs so at least i control braking

2005 subaru outback will not track straight in slippery conditions at all.the term 'ghost walking' is being used for this and is very accurate.i do not feel secure driving in any snowy conditions in this vehicle.i had a 1995 subaru before this that was rock steady in snow, this car is very unpredictable.tire changes do not solve problem nor does alignment to oem specs.has been on going since i bought the car new.

I have owned and driven this subaru since july 06 and have driven it through 5 northern illinois winters. Today was our first snowfall this season and for the first time i have noticed that the car exhibits very "un-nerving" handling qualities in very light snow road conditions. Something has changed to make me feel like i will loose control of the vehicle. The car feels like it wants to fishtail out of control at any speed over 30 mph. Strange "wandering" best describes it.it feels like i'm driving in deep ruts of heavy road snow that wants to pull the car into the ruts but the road is barely covered. On two lane roads it feels like the car could easily cross the center line because of this odd steering feedback i feel on slick snow covered road conditions. I don't feel it in rain conditions. It has "never" felt like this before.the rear struts were replace last summer with oem struts. The car has never had an alignment but has always tracked down the road very straight. Tire wear is even and tires have been rotated multiple times. Tires are bridgestone turanza serenity with 66k and been through 3 winters before with no handling issue.once i noticed on this site that many outback owners are experiencing the same symptom, i knew i needed to get this posted in case of an accident. I'm now at least on record with my "handling concern complaint" and subaru of america can't say my concern was never addressed with the nhtsa.a car should never display the kind of handling issues that makes it feel unsafe to drive in light winter conditions. P.s. I took my son's honda crv with 198 k for a test drive in the same conditions today,on the same roads and found its handling very predictable. What is going on with these outbacks ?

While driving on slippery surfaces like ice and snow, the vehicle will begin swaying left and right uncontrollably. The sensation, also known as "ghost walking" could easily cause an accident if the driver can not control the swaying, and spinning out. Conditions of problem: driving during winter conditions, on snowy roads and highways. The vehicle is fine under dry/normal conditions. I believe the issue stems from the awd system.

My 2005 nearly killed me recently driving on straight highways that were a bit icy.despite 4 studded tires, it would barely stay on the road above 35 mph even going totally straight. Cars of all other types were flying past at 60-75 mph, no problem. But my car would end up going sideways and inadvertently switching lanes and or almost going off the road at speeds starting at about 35-40mph. We had three adults in the car and the car filled with luggage, so it was fully loaded. I've read that this "ghost walking" phenomenon happens to 2005 to 2009 subaru outbacks that were produced in the usa. It mainly happens when the car is fully loaded, which due to a rear suspension flaw, causes toe-in on the rear suspension and then the rear end becomes totally unstable. I had to drive at 35 mph on highways back with my hazard lights on the avoid being rear ended by all the traffic going at normal highway speeds. Based on what i experienced, they're death traps that should be recalled. More info: http://www.ultimatesubaru.org/forum/topic/103820-05-outback-awd-tricky-on-some-winter-roads/

I have had issues with my power train since purchase of the car.i have done both cv axles twice.the last time the control arms had to be replaced.ball joints have been twice.the shop i took my car to said they have seen this same issue in 4 other subaru's of the same year.during repair my drive knuckles broke.i have spend thousand on just my power train.between subaru dealership, burt brother, and premier auto, i want to make an official complaint and ask you to look into these issue.all of these companies have advised me to place this complaint.

I have experienced what is referred to as "ghostwalking" in my 2005 subaru outback. While driving in winter conditions such as slush, snow and ice mix, and black ice the car fishtails in the rear wheels making it impossible to safely drive this car.however driving on hardpack snow and hardpack powder the car handles fine. The car fishtails much worse when even a little weight is loaded in the rear.i do have dedicated snow tires, with studs.i am a very experienced driver in winter conditions, i do not drive too fast in poor road conditions.this is a serious problem that apparently many people have experienced. I have multiple friends who drive older subaru's who have never experienced such an encounter with their cars.bottom line this car is not safe to drive on winter roads, i have literally feared for my life on several occasions. Please do something about this.

Our subaru started what is described as "ghost walking".mild but noticeably last winter, severe and constant this winter (2013).on icy or snow packed roads, the vehicle's rear end moves or sways back and forth.speed from 25 mph up to 45 mph.can't go faster due to terrain and roads anyway.

2005 subaru outback sedan driven on icy/snowy road conditions experiences extreme slippage in the rear of the car.have experienced this on at least two other occasions with this vehicle in similar conditions.awd does not appear to be keeping the rear of the car on the road or in line.vehicle fishtails or ghostwalks on the road surface in these conditions.each time this was experienced was while driving on highway at speeds between 30 and 70 mph in icy/snowy conditions.i have a 1996 subaru legacy sedan as well that does not exhibit this type of unnerving wandering on the road when driven in exact same conditions.this wandering makes vehicle feel extremely unstable and the back of the car feels as though it wants to spin around or off the road.

While driving north on 91 to vermontthis car handled great in snow, .on the other hand the return tripsthe roads were plowed packed snow it was like the rear end was on ice skates(or ghost walking} whatever you call it when it happens it will scare the [xxx]out of you. The first couple times it happened, i had every excuse why it wasn't the car, i thought the stock tires were shot, so i bought 4 brandnew dunlop snow tires. I hoped problem would be solved, car handled even better in snow same on packed snow/ice.thought maybe the thule box was catching wind, removed thule box. Problem did not get better.i began searching for similar issues online and came across many suggestions that stock suspension sucked, which i kinda new, so i replaced suspension with supposedley the best available kyb hoped that after that investment problem would be solved, i was wrong again.after deeper investigation online i learned of ghostwalking.if i had bought a chevy cavalier or ford taurus or any other piece of crap that you wouldn't expect to handle said conditions it's one thing but for a car that either endores or is endorsed by the us ski team, ski patrol this car is not safe.about two months ago i was drivingup astraight away it had rained earlier. I was driving about 55 i the limit is 45 and the rear end slipped out and the car began ghostwalking.i don't feel safe driving my daughter in this car that i hoped to one day give her. I owned a 95 outback and had none of the above problems had reg tires.since finally figuring that i'm not crazy and other people are having this problem that can't be fixed,i want to trade it in but worry that whoever buys it might crash and die, icant very well go trade in this car and tell them this handles great,best car i ever owned just don't drive it on packed snow you no the reason you want a subaru in the first place.information redacted pursuant to the freedom of information act (foia), 5 u.s.c. 552(b)(6).

Right and left front control arm bushings split and replaced along with both front control arms.

I am a very experienced driver in snowy and icy conditions.my outback 2005 2.5i started wiggling out of control (especially felt the back end wiggle left to right) on a straight road with approx 1/2 inch ice and packed snow causing me to slow down from approximately 40 mph to 20 mph .other 2 wd vehicles passed us at much higher speeds with no apparent problem to keep straight.our car had 2 adults and 2 small children in it with skiing gear.changed our winter tires immediately after.the problem occurred again on a few other similar occasions, for which i went to the dealer to get aligned, tire changed again.went to dealer in 2010 after this occurred again on the highway with only slush and water.i had to slow from 55 mph to 30 mph to keep car in control.remember this is on the highway!!went to dealer again to re-align the car which according to them was not aligned.the problem re-occurred again this winter.i am now fed up, this is a dangerous car and i am turning it in to buy a new car. I can't understand why subaru is not recalling to fix the rear suspension.

This vehicle is dangerous on icy roads.on a recent trip when encountering ice, the rear end would fishtail uncontrollably until speed was reduced below 30 mph. This happened while maintaining speed in a straight line.all other cars were still doing speed limit (60)without problems and we were a hazard fishtailing at 30.a truck jackknifed trying to avoid us.please do something about these cars before someone is killed. The condition is called ghost walking and is widely reported here and on other websites.these are dangerous cars.

I was pulling into a parking space and put on the brake. Vehicle didn't respond to braking and kept going, over the,curb, across the median and hit 5 parked cars before it stopped.

Front wheel bearing failure @ 55,000 miles.

I drive a 2005 subaru outback xt limited and have experienced the rear sway, unstable conditions that many other people seem to be experiencing.i have done much research on the problem and have found that subaru's rear sway bar and alignment specs. To be unmatched for the longer wheel-base and the weight of the vehicle.after the replacement of the rear sway bar to a heavier duty one and a better alignment my outback now drives outstanding and handles like a dream.i am a spirited driver and i drive in all weather conditions including ice and snow and have had no problems since the upgrades.

We have a 2005 subaru outback that sways in the rear of car under the following conditions 1. Over bumps the rear will swing to the rightand dip. When roads are slick it will almost spin the vehicle. If you are in a left hand curve, even at low speed, the condition is exaggerated more than you would expect sort of like it was pushed in addition to the normal inertia you would experience. 2. Rear end traction becomes unstable under icy conditions where it appears that too much power is being distributed to the rear of the driveline then oscillating to each individual rear wheel. In my opinion 100% of the vehicles power concentrated to the rear differential is alternately distributed between the rear wheels and kind of gets stuck in this mode.

I have several times experienced what is known as ghost walking while driving my 2005 subaru outback 2.4i. I have driven under the same conditions with the car minimally loaded. Only on the times that the car was loaded with more than 2 passengers and their belongings did i experience ghost walk. On those times i was driving my outback on snow or ice covered road. I was driving at a steady rate of speed with consistent pressure on the gas. The rear of the vehicle would begin to pitch back and forth as if being blown by a heavy wind. There was no wind on those occasions, or not sufficient to cause the to sway the way it did. It felt as though the rear of the vehicle was attempting to pass the front. I slowed down each time, even though the road surface conditions did not dictate it. I was passed by 2 wheel drive vehicles, because my car felt unstable and unsafe to drive. I have never experienced this while the car was lightly loaded under the same road conditions.

2005 subaru outback unstable rear suspension. This caris absolutely terrifying to drive at hwy speeds in adverse weather conditions. The rear end sways and hops and swings uncontrollably. I have stopped driving this car and it will have a new owner. I will not drive such a under engineered piece of japanese iron and have the life scared out of me. There's plenty of cars out there that are safer to drive than this thing.subaru need to step up to the plate and fix this.

Car is extremely unstable on slick roads.specifically the rear of the vehicle "fishtails".

While driving on icy roads, the rear end of the car pitches left & right at an oscillation of about 1hz, 2-3" constantly trying to throw the car off the road.it does not matter if it's off throttle, off brakes - in a straight line at almost any speed it does it.new tires and 2 alignments did not correct the issue.

2005 subaru outback exhibits a serious of stability when driving at a steady speed on the highway when there is the slightest degradation of traction. The rear of the vehicle will begin to sway from side to side on flat and straight road surfaces if the roads are wet from rain or even with a light dusting of snow. On december 3 2010 i was driving north on i-75 north of flint michigan, there was occasional light snow flurries that were barely coating the road surface. I was driving at the posted speed limit (70 mph) when the snow started to lightly coat the road the vehicles rear end started to sway from side to side in a violent manner. I had to slow down to 50 mph to regain control of the vehicle, all the while i was being passed by 2wd pick ups and 2wd drive vehicles. The vehicle has exhibited the same behaviors on wet road surfaces during and following rain. It's time for subaru to correct this problem. I'm not feeling the love.*ln

On an extended road trip (17000 mi), in our new 2005 outback, we went through two sets of tires. The dealership corrected the alignment, which was severely off the first time (after 5000 miles.) but then at about 16000 miles, the second set was severely worn out. We had the alignment redone at the dealership in whitehorse, canada but we did not replace the tires as the warranty was not honored at that dealership. The left rear tire blew out about 400 miles from anchorage. We purchased a used tire at a gas station and limped on to anchorage, where we had purchased the vehicle. The performed an alignment for the second time, this time with a loaded back seat. We have since put about 6000 more miles on the vehicle and it has not shown severe wear since that re-alignment.

2005 subaru outback, 2.5l, 4eat, awdvehicle feels"loose" at speeds greater than ~35 on highways with patchy ice, slush, and or icy ruts. Rear end feels like it wants to come around. Has occurred with two passengers and approx 250 pounds in cargo area and with one passenger and ~250 pounds in cargo area.

I'm a recent owner of a 2005 subaru outback xt with 58k miles and under certain adverse weather situations; the car's tracking/driving characteristics perform in a hazardous and potentially deadly manner. When traveling in snowy and or slushy conditions on paved roads, the car's rear tires move from side to side loosing directional stability (i.e. Oversteer) with no provocation from the driver or outside influence. This occurs regardless of the load in the car (passengers/cargo), and under all driving situations (accelerating & coasting).the car has snow tires on all four wheels (nokian 225-55-17) that have less than 10k miles of use and are correctly inflated as instructed by the car's manufacture (30f/32r).initially, i thought the car might be out of rear alignment (toe), however after being inspected by the local subaru dealership and independent tire alignment shop, the car is within subaru's current specs for the model and tsb notice (5-36-07) from subaru of america.i drive 200 miles daily to and from work (pa/nj) for the last 11 years and in all weather conditions with zero accidents or mishaps.the purpose of buying a subaru was for the all weather capability advertised by the manufacturer. However, apparently i am not alone, as a recent search on line provided an outback forum dedicated to this car (2005-2009) which indicates this is an inherent problem with this group of cars by the numerous accounts from other owners with this particular characteristic.soa needs to step up and correct the obvious 'engineered compromise' with a raised rear suspension, and modify the lower control arms in order to correct the rear end stepping out due to adverseroad conditions and loads carried by owners under what would otherwise be normal operating parameters.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback awd (na). While driving approximately 35 mph during snowy weather, the rear of the vehicle began swaying left and right as if it were about to spin. The vehicle was taken to an authorized dealer who realigned the wheels. The failure occurred three times. The vehicle had not been repaired. The vin was unavailable. The failure mileage was approximately 31,000 and the current mileage was approximately 35,000.

On snowy/icy road, the handling on my 05 outback xt was worse than everything else on the road that day.the rear-end of the car was unstable and sliding side to side.i have put new tires on and had an alignment.this is unsafe, especially in a car that is thought to be good in winter.

90 degree swing of rear end when traveling at only 10 mph on icy road with excellent snow tires.there may be a rear suspension problem because left rear is over an inch lower than right rear.there is no subaru recall.

While driving on icy roads at speeds of 40 mph or more, the car sometimes "floats" to the side several inches.it feels different than fishtailing -- more like the car is being pushed by the wind. This occurs with no cross-wind, no acceleration, no cornering or braking, on flat straight icy roads while driving at a constant speed. The sideways slip is severe enough that you feel you may lose control and leave the road.the only fix is to slow down to 40 mph or less, while other cars are passing at 60 mph or more. After several occurrences, always on icy or slushy roads, i took the car to the subaru dealer, who performed an alignment. The report shows that the car had positive toe-in of 0.23 degrees (front left), 0.24 degrees (front right), 0.22 degrees (rear left) and 0.44 degrees (rear right).too much toe-in, i'm told, can cause excessive tire wear and can also cause poor handling on icy roads.please consider that complaints for both these issues may have a common cause.there are reports that toe-in increases over time with subaru outbacks, and that toe-in also increases when there is more weight in the back end of the car.the subaru outback dynamically shifts power to non-slipping wheels when one or more wheels loses traction, and apportions power 60/40 favoring the rear wheels.could these factors, along with excessive toe-in, create the kind of dangerous floating on icy roads that many outback owners have experienced?please, please investigate.

My 2005 subaru outback xt limited does not handle well in snow/icy conditions.the rear end oscillates back and forth in a very uneasy, unsafe manor.i just had the rear end and front end aligned.the tires are only half way worn.i was traveling 45 mph and every car on the road was not having issues with the road.i had to slow down to about 10 mph in order to feel safe.

Unstable car is extremely unstable on ice or slush cover roads. This has happened many times in the past 2 years. The rear fishtails from side to side. Had to slow down to very low speed to regain control. Other cars had no trouble and easily passed. Tires are good, alignment good.car also floats from right to left on dry pavement if wheels hit pothole or large crack in pavement. Rear instability.

In december of 2008 i drove from idaho to montana over christmas.road conditions were broken ice and compact snow.whenever the car would hit a bump in the road, the rear end would tend to kick from side to side.i was forced to reduce my speed to around 30 mph, even though all other vehicles could maintain higher speeds in a safe manner.i have experienced this problem on several later occasions, and it appears to occur only when the vehicle has been loaded down with passenger(s) or cargo.subaruoutback.org has a gigantic thread on this topic.it appears i am not the only one with this problem.http://www.subaruoutback.org/forums/showthread.php?s=b16ba9fdce5398dec3b38124c6d0e1b9&threadid=11267&perpage=20&pagenumber=1in march of 2009, i had an alignment done at a subaru dealership in boise.i have not experienced the problem to date, but this winter has been unseasonably warm, and i have not driven on much packed snow or ice.moreover, i have not driven with extra cargo, which seems to exasperate the problem.however, i am not convinced the problem is gone, and judging by the continued amount of complaints on subaruoutback.com, i believe subaru needs to formally address the problem.this is a significant safety concern.

Rear end of the vehicle fishtails when driving straight on an icy road.i have read many similar reports and experienced the issue somewhat, but today driving with a full passenger load was truly terrifying.the rear wheels would sway suddenly and completely without warning, sometimes feeling very close to the point of losing control on the interstate.i have lots of experience with driving various vehicles (including other late model subarus) in icy conditions and can state with absolute certainty that there is a dangerous problem with this car.

Driving on icy/snowy roads, the back end sways/"ghost walks" extremely dangerously probably 2-3" each way regardless of braking/turning/straightaway/accelerating.we were driving along with a 2wd vehicle from wi to mt which handled significantly better than the outback (which is supposed to be the top of the line winter car).had brand new (300 miles) quality all weather tires and an alignment.the car actually appears to be doing this now in dry conditions as well when i encounter bumps at highway speeds.the feeling of safety is severely lacking.

I have a 2005 subaru outback turbo.turbo failed at 65k miles.axel broke at 64k miles and now the right wheel bearing is out at 70k miles.i understand there is a recall on both rear bearings but not the front.turbo has been a big problem too.

Driving under normal cold conditions. Every time that we went under an overpass where ice has forced on the highway the car momentarily lost control. It was a good thing that the hazard ended quickly otherwise we would have been off the road

2005 subaru outback sedan driven on icy/snowy road conditions experiences extreme slippage in the rear of the car.have experienced this on at least two other occasions with this vehicle in similar conditions.awd does not appear to be keeping the rear of the car on the road or in line.vehicle fishtails or ghostwalks on the road surface in these conditions.each time this was experienced was while driving on highway at speeds between 30 and 70 mph in icy/snowy conditions.i have a 1996 subaru legacy sedan as well that does not exhibit this type of unnerving wandering on the road when driven in exact same conditions.this wandering makes vehicle feel extremely unstable and the back of the car feels as though it wants to spin around or off the road.

1.slightly icy road condition.2.abnormal loss of road feel and control.3.no known solution.

2005 subaru outback will not track straight in slippery conditions at all.the term 'ghost walking' is being used for this and is very accurate.i do not feel secure driving in any snowy conditions in this vehicle.i had a 1995 subaru before this that was rock steady in snow, this car is very unpredictable.tire changes do not solve problem nor does alignment to oem specs.has been on going since i bought the car new.

We have a 2005 subaru outback that sways in the rear of car under the following conditions 1. Over bumps the rear will swing to the rightand dip. When roads are slick it will almost spin the vehicle. If you are in a left hand curve, even at low speed, the condition is exaggerated more than you would expect sort of like it was pushed in addition to the normal inertia you would experience. 2. Rear end traction becomes unstable under icy conditions where it appears that too much power is being distributed to the rear of the driveline then oscillating to each individual rear wheel. In my opinion 100% of the vehicles power concentrated to the rear differential is alternately distributed between the rear wheels and kind of gets stuck in this mode.

Car is not safe on packed snow or icy roads.all road feel is gone and it feels as if the car could spin out of control at any moment.most other cars seem to pass without issue.for a awd car this is unacceptable.you must slow down to 40 and below to have any hopes of keeping the car in a straight line.i have put nokia snow tires on the and car drives perfect in fresh snow but still cannot drive in slippery conditions.i have not noticed this on wet pavement.subaru feels like an alignment will correct the problem.going in for one in a week.if it does not fix the issue i will sell the car.i found many owners with the same issue on subaruoutback.org.

Intermittently and without warning, the accelerator pedal will become unresponsive. On multiple occasions, the vehicle was in motion when this happened. The speedometer fell to 0, and when pressed, the accelerator pedal did nothing. The vehicle had to be limped to the side of the road and restarted in order for it to work again. The check engine light would then come on. On other occasions, the accelerator would not respond immediately upon starting the vehicle, and the check engine light came on immediately upon starting. This has the potential to be extremely dangerous or fatal if the car were to go limp when driving on a highway at high speeds, or taking a turn. Research has shown that this is a widespread problem with the outback, and action needs to be taken by subaru. This should be treated as a recall.

I purchased this 2005 subaru outback this past summer.i have driven it on the very same road i describe below, under dry conditions, with absolutely no issues whatsoever. On this particular night, the roads were just starting to build snow and freeze, but others were driving and passing with no issues. While traveling on this two lane road, with a speed limit of 70mph, my subaru developed a sway in the back end. It felt like the subaru was going to lose control and sway into on coming traffic.if i went over 30mph the sway began and i feared that the "sway" was going to send my car into the opposite lane of traffic and cause me to have a head on wreck.i didn't notice any other vehicles having any issues.during this trip, i had to drive no faster than 30mph on a two lane road with a 70mph speed limit.there were several cars behind me and several in the oncoming lane.i couldn't pull over and let traffic pass because there wasn't any turn outs and there was continuous oncoming traffic.i was forced to drive less than 30mph, for fear that i was going to have a head on collision, and had to straddle the rumble strip on the shoulder of the road.i was nearly forced off the road by a semi truck following me.this was an extremely scary situation.i have been driving on snow and ice covered roads for over 30 years and i have never had an experience as horrible as this.i feared for my life and the lives of my children riding in the car!!!!after getting past the ice and snow on this road, i drove on, going 70mph, and had no issues with the car at all.the "sway occurs"on icy/snow covered roads while going over 30mph.the "sway "only happens in the rear of the car.please! please! please! this is an issue that needs to be addressed and fixed!!!

On any wet or snowy pavement car is ghost walking, like the rear end has marbles under it. Speed of 35 mph, straight driving, on wet pavement.like a cat walking on its nails.terrified. Had alignment, new tires, new rear struts, sway bar, transmission wiring harness. Disabled abs so at least i control braking

Please refer to code p2138 - throttle/pedal position sensor switch with "d"/"e" voltage correlation dtc severity 2 of 3 repair -- i believe elaine chao should be made aware of the safety issues affecting the general public regarding this dangerous issue -- my subaru outback accelerator will shut down on the highway almost every day. Subaru is aware that this is a pervasive problem affecting thousands of subarus and should be forced to issue a recall. I'll be going 75 mph and then suddenly there will be no power and the car will coast to a stop in the middle of the highway. This then shuts down everyone on i35 and i almost get hit from behind multiple times a week.

Bought car in 2006. Check engine light came on after having a couple of months. Under warranty replaced oxygen sensor, went out after a month; also headlight went out. Had senior replaced again, went out again after 1 month.wasn't under warranty, the sensor was but not the labor.single income couldn't afford to keep replacing.my check engine light had been on for 9 years, and i haven't been able to use my cruise control.my 1 st subaru was a 1986; been driving one sense. Just thought you would like to know.

I have several times experienced what is known as ghost walking while driving my 2005 subaru outback 2.4i. I have driven under the same conditions with the car minimally loaded. Only on the times that the car was loaded with more than 2 passengers and their belongings did i experience ghost walk. On those times i was driving my outback on snow or ice covered road. I was driving at a steady rate of speed with consistent pressure on the gas. The rear of the vehicle would begin to pitch back and forth as if being blown by a heavy wind. There was no wind on those occasions, or not sufficient to cause the to sway the way it did. It felt as though the rear of the vehicle was attempting to pass the front. I slowed down each time, even though the road surface conditions did not dictate it. I was passed by 2 wheel drive vehicles, because my car felt unstable and unsafe to drive. I have never experienced this while the car was lightly loaded under the same road conditions.

Rear hatch does not lock.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback.the contact stated that the accelerator pedal would intermittently become unresponsive.the dealer repaired the defect, but the failure recurred.the manufacturer was not contacted.the vehicle was not repaired.the failure mileage was 65,696 and the current mileage was 75,000.

While driving my outback lost suddenly lost all acceleration.the check engine light immediately came on and the cruise control light began to blink.the car continued to move forward but decelerated to about 15 mph which nearly resulted in my being rear ended.i was able to get to the side of the road where i turned the car off and turned it back on.after doing this the car behaved normally expect the check engine and cruise control lights stayed on.after about an hour, both lights went off.since then, this problem has recurred multiple times.i recently took the car to be repaired where the problem was diagnosed as a bad pedal assembly.however, i'm concerned that this problem will reoccur at speed and cause an accident.

Error code p2138: some failure of pedal sensor assembly while in motion. Exact issue unknown. Acceleration goes limp and pedal becomes non-responsive. Has happened in both city and highway driving situations. Very dangerous in traffic

On approximately 10 occasions right after a rain when i start up the car the engine light starts blinking and the car runs roughly with little power. After a short time the car power returns but the check engine light stays on for about a week. Once the light goes out the car then runs normal until the next rainstorm. It then does the same all over.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback.when the contact attempted to move forward, the vehicle accelerated on its own and crashed into another vehicle.there were no injuries.the failure occurred a total of three times.the most recent failure was on january 10, 2009 while parking the vehicle.she took the vehicle to the dealer, but they could not duplicate the failure.a report was filed with the manufacturer and they stated that there was no recall for the vehicle.the failure mileage was 30,000 and current mileage was 44,000.

My subaru (and others '05-'09) have serious computer issues causing the car to stall out in the middle of traffic.i got the car special edition of consumer reports and the article below is no joke.subaru outback '05-'09 have gotten terrible reviews for the following:major engine issue and drive issues and more. The dealer and headquarters will not acknowledge that there may be a serious need for a recall.when disconnecting and reconnecting the battery, the car will stall out the next day in the middle of traffic. Car ran but then stalled out in the middle of traffic. I was able to get it off the road eventually and take it to the dealership. The dealership did not want to acknowledge the issue and wanted to charge me $200 for diagnosis. I do not feel safe driving my car because i need to get a new battery ($225 at subaru which i can't afford and $119 at firestone), however, firestone does not have the memory stick subaru does and i run a very good chance of stalling out in traffic after the work is done at a non subaru dealership. Neither the dealer nor headquarters will acknowledge this article that this safety issue has happened to others too. This is very unsafe for me and others on the road here is an article which describes exactly what happened to me. A recall needs to be involved and subaru must be waiting for a major accident to happen.i am not willing to put my life on the line anymore by driving this unsafe vehicle. This article provides exactly what is going on.http://www.computerworld.com/article/2467230/enterprise-applications/please-don-t-reboot-the-subaru.htmlsubaru hq lost the email twice and i am very afraid to drive this car.austin subaru and subaru headquarters acted like they remedied the situation by cleaning a different part.

While driving or accelerating from a stopped position the accelerator loses control. Check engine light comes on and i then have to coast to a safe place on the road. I turn off ignition, remove and replace gas cap, restart the xar. Had the check engine code checked as p2138. Trottle/pedal position sensor switch. So far i have been lucky and not been hit while this occurs.this has been happening for 2 weeks now. Going to repair shop to hope for repair.

Lost throttle response on expressway with oncoming traffic from on-ramp almost causing collision while trying to move to the shoulder. Applied brakes to stop vehicle once on shoulder, car was revving at 3300 rpms. Placed vehicle in park and turned switch to off. Started car to find the throttle still revving to 3300 rpms and turned off again. Waited 5-minutes and started car again with the throttle at normal idle. Drove car 15-miles and the cruise and check engine light turned off. Happened in rainy and cold weather.

I have been having a problem with my car for the 2-years and has been getting worse.the throttle pedal at times will become non-responsive and the engine idle cannot be controlled.at this time the check engine light is on with a code.p2138.i have taken the car to the dealer with no luck they could not find anything wrong.the car has left me stranded several times and i had to limp or be towed home.the rpm can be anywhere from idle to 3000 rpm and as i said the pedal has no control.i have replaced the accelerator pedal assembly and the problem was gone for the past six months.it has now failed again.

Just after getting off i-43 near sheboygan on frontage road my car lost all power and no acceleration on gas pedal. Check engine light came on and cruise control light was blinking. I had to shift to neutral and pull over to a shoulder. Turned the car off for couple of minutes while i check under the hood. Started the car just fine but check engine light was still on and cruise was blinking. Subaru mechanic read error code p2138 throttle/pedal position sensor/switch 'd'/'e' voltage rationality. They said it was caused by bad contacts on tps sensor by the gas pedal. He reset the code and it has not appeared again for almost a week. I am afraid of it going off again while my wife and kids are driving it on the highway. Does someone need to die before subaru takes action on this.

I am having an issue with my car going limp after start. The engine does not register the gas pedal/throttle.code reader said its the throttle position sensor.brought to mid hudson subaru in wappingers ny, they said gas pedal sensor. That did not fix vehicle.subaru does not seem to recognize this as a safety issue... The problem is sporadic and there is no warning, just driving along and gas pedal no longer has any effect on propulsion of vehicle.

I was attempting to accelerate from a stop light and my outback acted as though i took my foot off the accelerator. The more i attempted to accelerate the less it responded. If the oncoming traffic hadn't noticed, they would have hit me. When i finally got it off the road and shut if off for awhile, it started but didn't run correctly. I called the subaru dealer and they hauled it 90 miles to their shop. The replaced the foot pedal sensor and it worked ok until the last 2 weeks and it is acting like it did 2 years ago. As i visit with other owners, they say they have the same issue but do not worry about it. I feel as though this is a safety feature that needs attention and a permanent fix for a solution before some one gets hurt do to the inability to accelerate and get out of harms way.

While traveling in heavy flow rush hour multi-lane traffic at around 65 mph and at merging point of multi higher exchange with near zero shoulder or stopping lane, the car suddenly lost response from accelerator pedal. I manage to coast to a stop just between the triangle space separating two of the major highways varying two separate direction with very heavy traffic at high speed on both sides (nearly getting smashed several times before coming to the only possible yet dangerous place to stop). The car remain idling but very limp; afraid to venture to continue to the next exit because there would be no shoulder area to pull over, i called for help thinking the car had ran out of gas and was just running on fume. After enduring several minutes of near death moments of being crashed into by on-coming vehicles at high speed merging traffic coming from a curving road, i dangerously ventured to open doors into flowing traffic to fill the tank escaping death many times. The car started and was able to get off highway to fill tank.same limp pedal repeated again two days later coming off a two lane {two-way) bridge with absolutely no shoulder. I was able to coast to the end of the bridge to turn into a business parking without being plowed by the heavy traffic around.obd reading of the car indicate p2138 pointing to faulty fly-by-wire defect in the accelerator position sensor which is part of the accelerator assembly. I manage to escape death with this manufacturer defect. I just wonder how many crashes and deaths have resulted and will continue to result because of this very well reported issue with these subaru outbacks before the accelerator assembly units are recalled?

The contact owned a 2005 subaru outback. The contact stated that the brakes failed to engage and the vehicle crashed into a tree and caught fire. The air bags did not deploy. Fourpeople were injured and police and fire reports were filed. A month prior to the accident, the vehicle was inspected and no failures were found. The vehicle was inspected after the crash and it was discovered that the tumbler system was defective. The vin was unavailable at the time of the complaint. The current and failure mileages were unknown. Updated 7/16/10 updated 07/27/10

2005 subaru outback.the car was in park and my right foot was tucked back behind my left foot which was resting on the foot rest pad on the far left side of the floor.the engine was idling normally when suddenly it went to very high revs for 4 to 5 seconds and then returned to normal idle.later the same evening, as i slowly entered my garage and applied normal brake pressure, the car first slowed (as expected) then suddenly began to accelerate.i applied hard brake pressure and the car stopped.it did not seem like the engine had revved as high as the earlier incident and it only lasted for a couple of seconds, but there was a definite, brief surge forward as i entered the garage.

2005 subaru outback faulty cruise control. Consumer states that the invoice states that it turns off on its own but it should state that it turns on by itself.the consumer stated while the cruise control was in use, suddenly and unexpectedly the vehicle lunged forward at a high rate of speed, jumping a 10 inch curb, striking a pine tree, then down a grassy slope and off a second curb into a lower parking area.

1) recurring phantom revving (in neutral and/or clutch depressed, both while completely stopped and while slowing down from any and all speeds) upwards of 4-5k rpm with difficulty getting the rpms back to normal.happens sometimes daily, sometimes constantly, sometimes it goes a few days without happening.2) complete loss of pedal control/response (a "limp" pedal) while going 60mph on a freeway, managed to coast to safety and let the car sit for 10+ minutes, when it restarted and the throttle worked again.stored code p2138, cel on and cruise control disabled.have only driven the car a few times since, out of fear of losing pedal control again.-- online research has led me to a number of possible solutions, most common being defective throttle position sensor connections (which frequently get exposed to the elements and corrode, apparently), bad accelerator pedal position sensor, and many people replaced the entire pedal assembly when the previous "fixes" did not solve the problem.

This complaint concerns the intermittent refusal of the cruise control on my 2005 subaru legacy outback to give up control of the engine when the cruise control handle is pulled down to the coast position and to cause an unexpected, dramatic increase in car speed when the intent is to disengage the cruise control and slow car speed (?the problem?).the problem has existed since purchasing my subaru as new in 2005.the problem has been intermittent, occurring "out-of-the-blue" and when least expected.on more than one occasion when i wanted to slow but not break the car by pulling the cruise control handle to the coast position, the cruise control would refuse to give up control of the engine and, in some instances, the engine would advance to greater speed, almost causing a collision with traffic i was following.in one test i conducted after almost slamming into the rear end of car being driven in front of me, not only did the cruise control not give up control of the engine when i pulled the cruise control lever to the coast position, the engine continued advancing from a speed of 65 mph to 80 mph during the entire time that i held the cruise control lever was in the coast position.the only was i was able stop the cruise control from controlling the engine was by breaking the car.the problem has occurred regularly and continuously on an intermittent basis since my purchase of the car on 5/14/2005 from lithia subaru in reno, nevada.although causes appear to differ, the problem is similar in nature to toyota cars experiencing unexpected speed increase due to defective accelerator pedals as now being described in the news media.

- the contact stated that the driver was pulling into a parking space with a 2005 subaru outback when the car unintentionally accelerated.the contact stated that his mother was doing about 5 mph.the contact stated that is was a nice day and weather was not an issue.the contact stated that the car stopped when it struck trees and that front end damage was done to the car.the contact also stated that the car's engine continued to run until his mother turned the car off.updated 1/19/2007 -

Driving on interstate freeway, in heavy traffic, with the cruise control set, when the vehicle suddenly lost all power and throttle response.the "check engine" light came on, and the "cruise" light started blinking.engine continued to run at high idle but speed and rpm were not maintained. I was lucky enough to cross 4 lanes of traffic and stop. Turned off the engine, which was running at 2200 rpm.after a brief stop and investigation, i was able to restart the engine and drive normally to an auto parts store.i scanned the obd ii code (dtc code) and found p2138 - throttle position sensor.no injuries, but this is a potentially deadly issue.has recurred one time since.

Bought the car from a toyota dealer in june 2011. Within 5 days of buying it, when driving the car on highway, within 15 mins of driving, all of a sudden the car jerks, with a sudden drop in speed, with the check engine light turned on and cruise light starting to blink.car would not speed up no matter how much the accelerator is pressed.i had to pull the car to the side of the road.i have taken it several times to subaru service...they seem to know what the problem is and attempt to fix it- i pay them and drive it back home and, the same problem persists.i get the same code each time - p0638.replaced throttle body.replaced timing belt.replaced the throttle control relay. Etc.the mechanics seem to test drive it and find no problem with it.every time they seem confident that they have fixed it.but, everytime i begin to drive, the car faults and the speed drops in the middle of the road.it is a danger to anyone in the car and to passengers in other cars.

Car suddenly looses power and will not run above 1500 rpm it will run but you have to turn it on and off several times it does this when pulling out or going steady down the road .... Cruise light flashing and check engine light on

Following a few weeks of a ruff idle at stop lights, the throttle position sensor failed on my 2005 subaru outback 2.5i.after getting off of the highway and sitting at a stop light, the gas pedal would not work.the vehicle was running, however there was no reaction at all from pushing the pedal all the way to the ground and the check engine light was on.after turning the car off and restarting it normal function returned, however i was informed that failure could occur again at any time including while driving.my mechanic read the code as the throttle position sensor and replaced the accelerator pedal position sensor.

While driving on the highway at 65 mph, the car would not accelerate.the check engine light came on and the cruise control light flashed.once the car was turned off and restarted, the accelerator again engaged.this is an extremely dangerous (and common in subarus) malfunction.i was fortunate enough to be able to pull over on the side of the highway without incident.

Accelerator pedal randomly stopped functioning while driving straight on flat road approximately 30mph, resulting in no speed control, able to drive only on idle speed.first seems like not 'shifting gears' correctly, then no speed control. (many comments in online forum of elusive problem to diagnose by subaru dealers and much money spent with only random success.)when restarted car drove normally with 'check engine light' on about 3 miles then same thing, accelerator went limp, no speed control but got me home.car taken in to dealer the next day.(drove down hill approx 30 miles with no problem).service department claimed "not current code" (clearly the problem is intermittent) and said never heard of such a problem (nonsense, it's all over the web); they cleaned the throttle mechanism, hoping that would fix.drove car to san francisco about 100 miles and four days later it failed again, same scenario--acceleartor fails to function while driving on flat ground, this time going about 20mph, 55f outside, after about 5 minutes of driving, in san francisco this third time!serious safety hazard if happens on a freeway, a bridge, a hill, etc. Called two subaru dealers, nobody wants to help!

Car randomly goes limp while driving, accelerator will not respond. Have to put it in neutral and eek to the side of the road. Very dangerous! check engine light illuminates, pulling a p2138 code.

While driving north on 91 to vermontthis car handled great in snow, .on the other hand the return tripsthe roads were plowed packed snow it was like the rear end was on ice skates(or ghost walking} whatever you call it when it happens it will scare the [xxx]out of you. The first couple times it happened, i had every excuse why it wasn't the car, i thought the stock tires were shot, so i bought 4 brandnew dunlop snow tires. I hoped problem would be solved, car handled even better in snow same on packed snow/ice.thought maybe the thule box was catching wind, removed thule box. Problem did not get better.i began searching for similar issues online and came across many suggestions that stock suspension sucked, which i kinda new, so i replaced suspension with supposedley the best available kyb hoped that after that investment problem would be solved, i was wrong again.after deeper investigation online i learned of ghostwalking.if i had bought a chevy cavalier or ford taurus or any other piece of crap that you wouldn't expect to handle said conditions it's one thing but for a car that either endores or is endorsed by the us ski team, ski patrol this car is not safe.about two months ago i was drivingup astraight away it had rained earlier. I was driving about 55 i the limit is 45 and the rear end slipped out and the car began ghostwalking.i don't feel safe driving my daughter in this car that i hoped to one day give her. I owned a 95 outback and had none of the above problems had reg tires.since finally figuring that i'm not crazy and other people are having this problem that can't be fixed,i want to trade it in but worry that whoever buys it might crash and die, icant very well go trade in this car and tell them this handles great,best car i ever owned just don't drive it on packed snow you no the reason you want a subaru in the first place.information redacted pursuant to the freedom of information act (foia), 5 u.s.c. 552(b)(6).

Every once in a while the gas pedal stops functioning. It happens at highway speeds as well as local roads. When it does happen you have to find a safe spot to pull over and shut off the engine for at least a minute or more. Restart the car and the pedal comes back. This is very hazardous. I could end up getting rear ended. My grand children ride in the car. The scanner code came up p2138 subaru recommends that the gas pedal assembly needs to be replaced. It's a 185.00 part plus labor.i don't understand why there isn't a recall because of the safety issue

From an intersection, i slowed down to make a right turn and upon completing the turn, i put my foot on the gas pedal to accelerate and the pedal was unresponsive.i had enough momentum to quickly turn onto a side street out of traffic.the gas pedal when pushed down all the way would not accelerate and did not make the revving sound.this is the fifth time this has occurred to me since purchasing this new vehicle in 2005.it seems to be occurring more often now.

Intermittently and without warning, the accelerator pedal will become unresponsive. On multiple occasions, the vehicle was in motion when this happened. The speedometer fell to 0, and when pressed, the accelerator pedal did nothing. The vehicle had to be limped to the side of the road and restarted in order for it to work again. The check engine light would then come on. On other occasions, the accelerator would not respond immediately upon starting the vehicle, and the check engine light came on immediately upon starting. This has the potential to be extremely dangerous or fatal if the car were to go limp when driving on a highway at high speeds, or taking a turn. Research has shown that this is a widespread problem with the outback, and action needs to be taken by subaru. This should be treated as a recall.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. While driving with the cruise control set to 75 mph, the contact applied repeated pressure to the brakes yet the cruise control would not disengage. The contact used the cruise control off button but to no avail. The contact was unable to stop the acceleration of the vehicle and proceeded to crash into an unknown object. The vehicle was destroyed. The driver and passenger sustained unknown injuries. A police report was available. The vehicle was towed to the contact's insurance company lot and was not examined for the cause of failure. The failure and current mileages were 77,000.

Intermittent throttle disabled.car becomes unresponsive to the gas pedal.engine continues to run but gas pedal has no response.

Cruise control does not operate properly with manual transmission. The throttle will hesitatate and surge when descending on even a small hill. This is distracting to the driver and could be a safety concern. I contacted the dealer and was informed that this is how the vehicle was designed and a fix is not possible.

Every time the cruise control is engaged while going downhill the throttle begins to rapidly and wildly accelerate and decelerate as if it is out of control. It stops when cruise control is disengaged. Very unnerving.

Manual transmission outback wagon non-turbo cruise control turns off unexpectedly on highways.was filed at wilkins subaru in md a while back and they made some change to the computer by soa and it went away.well it came back on my latest road trip.it would kick out at vary durations, on varying terrain, at varying temperatures, and various speeds.the trip went from the gulf coast to thebaltimore over 2 days.my wife put 1500 miles on the car in 2 days a week earlier with no troubles and the next 1200 it was a constant problem.it didn't seem to matter if i set the speed and left it or if i set the speed and used the "accel" "deccel" buttons.major nuisance and unsafe.i couldn't always tell it turned off until all of a sudden the car behind me was much too close.then the car lunges as i his "resume"

2005 subaru outback: when cruise control is engaged, acceleration becomes extremely irregular, especially after cresting a hill, engine pulsates as if gas flow to the engine is being interrupted irregularly, car bucks or pulses.

The rear windshield wiper stopped working due to a bad electrical connection that occurs where the hatchback opens up. The wires fray and break from normal usage of the hatchback, causing loss of power to the rear windshield wiper, defogger and backup lights.i have experienced this problem and there a numerous blogs and videos on the internet showing this problem, this should be recall item for all 3rd generation subaru outbacks(2005-2009).

Defrosters and all digital climate controls are unresponsive. I cannot see out of my vehicle

Rear wiper failure was first noticed followed by failure of the license plate light, the wiring harness in the rear lift gate has multiple broken wires where the door hinges. Appears that the wiring insulation becomes hardened and brittle, and will break instead of flexing. There are several other wires in the harness that are showing bare wire but have not yet broken. This is what all the harness enables and will eventually fail:rear wiper motorlicense plate lightrear gate latch switchrear gate lock actuatorrear defoggerback-up light rhrear defoggerback-up light lh

Soon after purchasing the car, i realized that the rear wiper was not functioning.after checking an online owners forum i found that there is a common problem with the functions in the rear lift gate such as inoperable brake lights, rear wipers inoperable, and other items.this problem seems to be caused by the degradation of wire insulation and breakage of wire.upon further investigation i discovered my own vehicle has a severed wire located in the accordion boot on the right (passenger) side near the hinge for the lift gate.this could result is serious safety issues.as with any faulty electrical wiring there is also a risk for fire associated with this issue.

I was driving on the highway and my sunroof exploded. I pulled over and looked for any rocks or anything in the car that would have shattered the sunroof but could not find anything.

Rear hatch harness wires are broken/ frayed. Backup lights do not work, and the rear wiper works intermittently. Every now and them rear defroster doesn't work. Hazard a lot of 2005-2009 outbacks have.

The contact owns a 2005 subaru outback. The contact stated that the front driver side window exploded and shattered when he rolled it down. The contact had no prior problems with the window and there was no change in temperature that could have contributed to the failure. The contact was awaiting a window company representative, referred by the insurance company, who would replace the window at the time of the complaint.the current and failure mileages were approximately 60,800. Updated 0/29/10. *ljupdated 09/21/10

My daughter was in a bad accident when a driver decided to do a u-turn into her vehicle.the driver did not see in side mirror because she was in a "blind spot.most european autos have a split driver's side mirror, so that there is "no blind spot". The split is vertical about one third of the way in from the outside of the mirror. My contention is that if the driver had had such a mirror, there may have been no accident.

Wheel bearing failure.

Wheel bearing failure.

Right, front wheel bearings replaced due to wear.

Left, front wheel bearing replaced due to wear.

Right, rear wheel bearing replaced due to wear.

I was pulling into a parking space and put on the brake. Vehicle didn't respond to braking and kept going, over the,curb, across the median and hit 5 parked cars before it stopped.

Right and left front control arm bushings split and replaced along with both front control arms.

Left, rear bearing replaced due to wear.

2005 subaru outback rear hub recall:not convinced that the recall that replaces the rear hubs with the improved version is effective.i had both rear hubs replace under the recall at 45,000 miles and one of those went out at 86,000 miles (41,000 miles after replacement).this concerns me that the new rear hubs are having problems so quickly.




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