Plugs on these cars are no fun. 2 hours I'd say. Left side, battery has to come out. Right side air box comes out. Not much room to work. Doable, just tedious.
Yeah, I'm aware and have done it before. Since they're already under there I'll waste the $80 and save $80 by doing my oil change myself in a few monthsThe rear diff drain and fill is easier than an oil change and takes about a 1/2 hour in the driveway on a bad day. Remember take the fill plug out first! Parts 10 bucks.
Do it yourself. The Walmart Supertec semi-synthetic gear oil is fine and dandy.
View attachment 284756That's my (ir)rational thinking.
17 2.5 Forester.What car is the O.P's Anyhow ? Subaru what? With what engine and Year? did I miss it?
Why not do it yourself ?
Just wondering….
You and a couple others on here seem to understand why I don't want to do the plugs on a Boxer enginePlugs on these cars are no fun. 2 hours I'd say. Left side, battery has to come out. Right side air box comes out. Not much room to work. Doable, just tedious.
Cannot speak to Colorado Discount Tires, but the Kansas City franchisee is now charging for tire rotations for tires not purchased at Discount Tire. Rationale was that a balance was required by them; no rotation only. I learned about that and quit using Discount Tire rotations. I have replaced the tires with a Discount tire purchase so I don't have the issue anymore.Maybe in your area the cost is just higher. I'm seeing at Subaru dealerships near me in Colorado, $120-$170 for brake fluid flush which is highway robbery. Oil changes for $70 $25 for tire balance and rotation (which is free with Big O, Discount Tire etc.) I'm seeing online quotes for spark plugs at Subaru Dealers and some Indy shops at $275-600 for just plugs! This isn't a McLaren 670LT. One guy was quoted $106 for plugs (Really?) And $308 for labor charges. A Subaru dealer mechanic should have this down fairly quickly. I know that some dealerships have really stepped up the pay for mechanics making their wages somewhat livable. The new mechanics seem to get oil changes and low dollar jobs so they'll fix stuff on the side.
Those plugs you had installed at 60K should be good still. I would wait for a high misfire count before digging in. Those advanced NGK ruthenium likely have another 25K mi easy in them. If that is what the repair shop put in!You and a couple others on here seem to understand why I don't want to do the plugs on a Boxer engineOnce in my life was enough. Could I? Yeah. Do I need that frustration in my life? No.
Once Subaru went to DOHC with COP on the new FB2.5 it gets pretty tough to get to the plugs. The cylinder heads - yes there are two in a boxer - are jammed up close to the unibody frame rails.My niece was quoted $500 from Nissan to change her plugs and pcv. I did it for $100 in a half hour and that was what the parts cost. I have no idea what your engine is like but, if you can see them you can change them. I understand some of the fluids if your not equipped.
That's the problem.... It's their location. He probably can't actually see them.My niece was quoted $500 from Nissan to change her plugs and pcv. I did it for $100 in a half hour and that was what the parts cost. I have no idea what your engine is like but, if you can see them you can change them. I understand some of the fluids if your not equipped.
Assuming that they actually do everything and not just claim to have done it, yes.$1,470 for all that work at the dealer is fair.
That's the problem.... It's their location. He probably can't actually see them.
Are Subarus still the oil burners they always were? If so, I’d say 60k is to bandaid the inevitable which is fouled plugs.125K. Subaru says plugs every 60K for some silly reason. My Toyota is like 120K or something. My old Honda was also 120K intervals for plugs. For whatever reason, Subaru likes fresh plugs or something. And they're a pain to get to (from my experience), require a lot of cussing, and multiple runs to places to find strange angled extensions that you know you have somewhere but don't seem to fit this time around.
I'm guessing book time at the dealer is two hours. Plus plugs. That's about the going rate. Some motors like the 6 cylinder Highlander requiring moving stuff off the top of the motor to access the plugs on the firewall size and is quoted in excess of $500.00My niece was quoted $500 from Nissan to change her plugs and pcv. I did it for $100 in a half hour and that was what the parts cost. I have no idea what your engine is like but, if you can see them you can change them. I understand some of the fluids if your not equipped.