Here is PN for individual quarts!
I'm pretty sure they are programmed to be sluggish when cold, so they don't slip the belt. Its a bit hard to figure out what's actually happening when the car is controlling the throttle body, timing, the CVT pulley and the torque converter all as it sees fit, with the throttle pedal position only 1 input of several?I used the HPL HP CVT ATF fluid for a recent drain and fill and filter change on my wife's Outback. I actually did a drain with filter change, fill, then drain again after running through the gears, then fill. The last fill was with the HPL CVT fluid, and the first fill was with Subarau CVTFII.
I wish I had though about doing the double drain and fill before ordering the HPL, and I would have ordered enough of the HPL for both fills. With the BITOG discount, even after shipping, the HPL CVT fluid is less expensive than Subaru CVTFII fluid from the local Subaru dealership.
Since the main purpose of servicing the CVT was to replace the valve body, and the drain and fill and screen/filter change was all to support that, I also did a transmission relearn at the end.
Even though there is still about 40% Subaru and 60% HPL fluid in the CVT, I feel that the transmission is running smoother than it has before. Those familiar with CV transmissions are probably also familiar with how sluggish they can be at cold start in cold winter conditions. I am anxious to see if there is any improvement to that, as HPL says "This CVT fluid is a multi-synthetic fluid, made with PAO, esters and other premium base oils, making this fluid perfect for cold climate operations."
Went to do the CVT 100K Km/60K mile maintenance in our nelwy acquired 2021 X-trek. Called the local Subaru stealership, who said they only sell the apparenlty platinum-infused, Mars procured, ultra-grade, Subby-only CVT3 fluid in 20L/5gal pails in Canada. How much? ALL OF IT. $795.00, for me.
So I said OK, how much to have you do it? $500 he said. So I told 'em: I didn't want MY fluid changed, I wanted the cars fluid changed.
So he pulls me aside and wispered (as if we were trading state secrets) that I could TRY buying Subaru CVT fluid in the qt online, or that (looking around to see if anyone was listening), there might be "off-brands' that could work. But I didn't hear that from him.
SO, after much research, including emailing the TECH departments at both Subby Canada and AMSIOIL, I dit it myself....and you'll NEVER guess how much it cost - and how long it took me.
Take a gander at this - and learn ALL the SECRETS.
HPL is not some fly-by-night company (hello, Triax). I’m not speaking for HPL legally here, but I’m willing to wager that if HPL’s fluid was proven to be the cause of the failure, Dave would make it right. IMO they go above and beyond on the service side. Every single employee I’ve met takes pride in and responsibility for the quality of the product they deliver. Somebody who buys $80 of product per year is treated with the same respect as someone who buys $80,000 of product per year.Will they come to court with me when Subaru tells me to piss off when my CVT fails? Just having fun with you man. I'm sure I can find "comparable", but there is no way in hell I'm dicking around with Subaru while under warranty.
So you’re saying that Multi-CVT fluids work. Color me not shocked. Amsoil makes great fluids as well.No issues with Amsoil CVT fluid in 2017 Accord sport past 50K miles. 3rd drain and fill coming up this spring
It would cost a mint and then some, and I understand your concerns, but what would your (and every other hesitant person’s) position be if HPL bought a brand new Legacy XT (I forget the nomenclature for the “new” turbos ATM), drained all factory fluids and replaced with the “base” PCMO, CVT fluid, and Gear Life with as close to zero miles & no break-in, and then ran laps at top speed around Indianapolis until they got to 60k and then measured wear? (For fun, at an average of 140mph it would take nearly 18 days around the clock to make 60k). Let’s offer 10k OCIs, 30k CVT, and 30k diffs, with UOAs on all fluids at changes.Its not about trust to me. IF the transmission blows up unrelated to the fluid I dont want to get caught out by a warranty denial due to non-oem fluid.
Now after any warranties are gone. HPL sounds like a winner.
Not true. You are putting your money on the additive supplier (whoever that may be), not HPL.but I’d put my money on HPL in that bet.
Even though there is still about 40% Subaru and 60% HPL fluid in the CVT
It seems Idemitsu is the main supplier(to factory's) for all Asian vehicle automatic and cvt transmissions.Rockauto sells Idemitso SB 2 fluid in 5 quart jugs. I've used it. It's color is green. I'm thinking this is the same as Subaru OEM fluid.
Not true. An additive alone will not make an otherwise subpar fluid perform to the specification. Any oil is determined by the overall product, not any given component of it. One could have the greatest add pack known to the world, mix it in an incompatible base oil, and create failures in every application.Not true. You are putting your money on the additive supplier (whoever that may be), not HPL.
True, but stated in a slightly misleading manner. Additive supplier will provide a "recipe" with acceptable base oil options, which if followed, will lead to a validated end result.Not true. An additive alone will not make an otherwise subpar fluid perform to the specification. Any oil is determined by the overall product, not any given component of it. One could have the greatest add pack known to the world, mix it in an incompatible base oil, and create failures in every application.
With Dr. Rudnick on staff, HPL has one of the premier formulators in the entire industry. He’s choosing the best overall product based on component compatibility. That means the final product is solely determined by HPL.
Am I the only one who feels a little bad for the lonely BITOGers who make spreadsheets to determine fluid mix/percentages??![]()