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5spd 2.2l Swap Sti Turbo Vf39 3" Downpipe on 2040-cars

Year:2004 Mileage:178000
Location:

Dover, Delaware, United States

Dover, Delaware, United States
Advertising:

2004 Subaru WRX
Java Black Pearl
178K miles
AWD
5spd transmission
Great interior
AC works great
Factory in-dash 6 disk changer(changed since photo taken)
Power windows
new exhaust up-pipe and 3" downpipe
STi VF39 Turbo
Aluminum Turbo Inlet
800cc injectors
Shifts and drives great
Runs and turbo works perfectly
2.2L shortblock with 100K miles swapped in a few months ago.  NEW timing belt, water pump, tensioners, all gaskets, cylinder heads checked, NEW head bolts, NEW STi 11mm oil pump, NEW Exedy clutch, rebuilt power steering pump.
Basically swapped the shortblocks and replaced everything.

However, has an odd missfire code P0000. Hence the low price.
Some suggestions by prospective buyers have been a vacuum leak, bad injector…I haven't invested ing time into tracking it down.
Still drive it, and drove it on a 2 hour round trip the other day with no problems.  Idles a little rough.

Currently set up for wastegate boost on turbo, has a lot more in it with a tune.  Can include cable to tune via windows laptop.
Also, can possibly include spare 2.0L shortblock and various parts.
Few minor dings here and there, standard stuff from driving a car in the real world.
Looking to make some changes in our vehicle lineup so this one needs to go!

DE tagged until Jan 2014

Auto Services in Delaware

Jeff D`Ambrosio Chevrolet Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Used Car Dealers
Address: 2158 Baltimore Pike, Hockessin
Phone: (610) 932-9090

Jamie`s Towing, LLC ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automotive Roadside Service, Towing
Address: 1043 N Academy Ave, Claymont
Phone: (484) 620-5998

Diamond State Tire Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Tire Dealers, Brake Repair
Address: 3482 Wrangle Hill Rd, Kirkwood
Phone: (302) 836-1919

Colonial Hyundai of Downingtown ★★★★★

New Car Dealers, Used Car Dealers
Address: 4423 W Lincoln Hwy, Yorklyn
Phone: (610) 873-9000

Bridge Auto Sales ★★★★★

New Car Dealers, Used Car Dealers
Address: 1600 S Dupont Hwy, Delaware-City
Phone: (302) 834-2337

Banghart`s Distributors ★★★★★

Automobile Parts & Supplies, Automobile Radios & Stereo Systems, Automobile Alarms & Security Systems
Address: 101 S Bolmar St, Winterthur
Phone: (610) 696-5555

Auto blog

Subaru uses a mime and a toy car to explain why it loves the boxer engine

Wed, 17 Apr 2013

I will freely admit to struggling with why Subaru continues to stubbornly employ a boxer engine design while so few other automakers do the same. After all, with twice the number of cylinder heads and cams as a traditional inline four-cylinder engine, a boxer four is more complex, more expensive to manufacture and more cumbersome to service with few tangible benefits. Until recently, the company's engines struggled to meet the fuel economy numbers of its competitors while offering no real boon in horsepower or torque. Subaru seems to recognize I'm not the only one scratching my head.
In order to help us non-believers understand what's what, the company has employed a pair of mimes, a toy car and a few clay engines to demonstrate the folly of every other automaker on the planet. Subaru says the boxer offers up a lower center of gravity than either an inline four-cylinder engine or a V6, which I will gladly concede. The company also says the design offers up smoother operation.
I'll offer just two counterpoints here. First, an engine with a low center of gravity is excellent, but when vehicles like the Forester, XV Crosstrek and Outback boast more ground clearance than most mainstream SUVs, that argument flies out the window. Second, anyone who's spent any amount of time behind the wheel of a vehicle equipped with an inline four and then proceeded to move into one propelled by a boxer can tell you the latter has all of the idling manners of a small tractor. Check out the video below to see for yourself.

The art of WRX-ing in the rain

Tue, Jun 13 2017

There it is again, the quiver of the STi's blue rear spoiler. I noticed it yesterday on the Autobahn north of Frankfurt. Although the speed limit was 120 kilometers per hour, I was cruising in sixth gear around 200 kph when the STi's signature rear appendage began to dance in my rear view mirror. Now I'm redlining fifth gear on the front straight of the legendary Nurburgring's north loop and it's back. Only this time the quivering blade is in a deluge of water coming off the Subaru's 18-inch Dunlops. It's a rooster tail worthy of Miss Budweiser and it's a constant and sobering reminder that I'm lapping the 13-mile long Nordschleife in a freezing and unrelenting rain. I'm driving a 2017 German-spec Subaru WRX STi, not the updated 2018 version that'll get revised front end styling, tweaked suspension tuning, larger Brembo brakes and 19-inch wheels and tires. At 240 kph, close to the 2.5-liter boxer four's 6,700 rpm redline, I shift up to sixth gear and change lanes to avoid the standing water on the left side of the track. It's my third lap. I'm getting over-confident. The all-wheel drive WRX STI is dealing well with the tricky conditions and the Ringmeisters of the past that tamed this track since it was first built in 1929 - Ascari, Fangio, Clark, Caracciola, Nuvolari, Rosemeyer, Chiron, and Ickx - are talking to me inside my head. And they're egging me on. Pushing me to go faster. I'm sticking to wet line and staying off the tall curbing that marks most apexes. Bounce the Subi off a curb and I'm sure to star in the next Nurburgring crash video to hit YouTube. I'm also desperately trying to stay off of the new pavement, which dots the circuit and has a coefficient of friction in the wet similar to snot. Then I make a huge mistake on the entrance to Bergwerk, a tight right hand corner that comes up quickly after a long, fast section and the left hand kink that Nicki Lauda got so wrong in the 1976 Grand Prix. The Nordschleife has 160 corners. Most are blind. Many are off camber. All are lined with walls and Armco barriers. Even the straights are kinked and crowned. And there are two very fast downhill compressions and three jumps that max out a car's suspension travel. There's no runoff room. No margin for error. And remembering the course in this weather in just a few laps is impossible, I don't care how much Gran Turismo you've played.

Subaru recalling over 8,000 cars for Takata airbag inflators

Tue, 08 Jul 2014

We have one more automaker to chalk up recalling Takata airbag inflators. Subaru is now throwing its hat in the ring by repairing 8,557 vehicles nationwide for faulty front passenger inflators. According to the Defect Notice from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the problem affects 3,151 examples of the Legacy, Outback and Baja from the 2003 and 2004 model years and 5,406 units of the Impreza, including the WRX and STI (pictured above), from the 2004 model year.
As we all know by now, it's possible for the inflators to explode during airbag deployment possibly affecting not only the bag's inflation but also potentially spraying metal shrapnel at occupants. All of the affected vehicles will receive new passenger side inflators at no charge to the owner.
Seven automakers in the US announced recalls for the problem in late June affecting an estimated 2.1 million vehicles. Unlike some of the companies, Subaru is repairing all of the affected models in the US, rather just in certain warm-weather states. According to company spokesperson Michael McHale to Autoblog the reason is that "it was simpler to get everybody in there and make sure it was done." The replacement inflators should be in by the end of July, he said. Scroll down to read the recall report from NHTSA or download the full defect notice as a PDF, here.