I always wondered why the manufacturer specs different fluids but aftermarket says 1 is ok.I do not mention it because the current outback XT is specced for CVT-LV, which Amsoil recommends their fluid for.
I always wondered why the manufacturer specs different fluids but aftermarket says 1 is ok.I do not mention it because the current outback XT is specced for CVT-LV, which Amsoil recommends their fluid for.
My 2012 took about 7 1/2 quarts. Drain, fill to overflow (About 5 1/2 quarts) start it and shift through the gears, and fill it again to overflow while running….About 2 additional quarts while running.Those don't look like the correct washers unless the Outback has a different setup than the other TR580's.
It will probably take about 5.5 qt for the drain and refill.
Mr. Subaru (who oddly is in South Carolina, not Colorado or New England) has regularly roasted Subaru of America for claiming CVT fluid change is not required. He says they are doing this to minimize projected cost of ownership."Lifetime fluids" is a marketing ploy, and not a maintenance philosophy.
Mr. Subaru (who oddly is in South Carolina, not Colorado or New England) has regularly roasted Subaru of America for claiming CVT fluid change is not required. He says they are doing this to minimize projected cost of ownership.
Traditionally, more Subaru owners paid with cash than any other brand, and kept them forever. I can remember the OUTRAGE on the Ultimate Subaru forum when it was discovered the 2.5’s did not last 300,000 miles. We had one 2.5 tha t had head gaskets at 140,000 miles but was traded in by a relative (in Vermont of course) with 289,000 miles.
So they were ignoring their base. He points out that in other markets, Subaru recommends service.
The H6 (3.0R and 3.6R) used the 5EAT through 2014, which was the end of the 4th gen Outback. It drove the VTD drive system on those models.You mention the H6 outback but
does not the current outback XT have the tr690?
Sorry to hear that, hope it failed while under warranty.Good choice IMO if you're going non-OEM. Definitely get it changed. I didn't bother on the 19 Impreza and the CVT failed.
Glad to hear you got the longevity out of your 2012 and I really liked your maint. plan. You know, the years I have been a member on this site --- pretty much anything affiliated with Valvoline motor oil with members feedback being decent to excellent. I would imagine there CVT fluid would fit in that mold also.I will just say this......I just passed my 2012 Outback with 287k miles on to my son and his wife. CVT (And the rest of the mechanicals of the car) still operate as new. I changed the CVT fluid every 40k miles, with Valvoline CVT fluid. I would probably have used Subaru fluid if they had not originally recommended that the fluid was lifetime, and they only sold it in 30 gallon drums when it was due for its first change.
Lifetime fluids are a non starter for me.
We figured that out a few posts back, my car has it too..but it now specs a different fluid.The H6 (3.0R and 3.6R) used the 5EAT through 2014, which was the end of the 4th gen Outback. It drove the VTD drive system on those models.
There is a high torque version of the CVT, not sure which models use it.
This website has details of Subarus by model and year from the ‘90’s.
https://cars101.com/
I've seen Subaru recommend CVT fluid changes as often as 24k km under severe service.I haven't found a copy of the japanese service schedule myself, but it allegedly suggests 40k km (~25k mi) service intervals for CVT fluid with severe service.
I believe it's 24.8k miles (40k km)I've seen Subaru recommend CVT fluid changes as often as 24k km under severe service.
For this particular maintenance item only towing qualifies as severe service.I've seen Subaru recommend CVT fluid changes as often as 24k km under severe service.
The original fluid was green maybe with a bluish tinge. Yeah the color was still obvious when drained at about 40k. The Valvoline fluid is a non descript tan color like undyed motor oil, but thicker. The Valvoline smells very similar to the OEM fluid. Red fluid would concern me as well. A lot of common ATF is red and CVTs don’t do well at all on ATF.Even though I don't tow @The Critic, I'm still going to replace it at that mark in my case. A used tranny with a universal red CVT fluid doesn't inspire confidence, but that's just me.