Fluids

Asked by GuruTC9V9 Jun 27, 2018 at 08:00 AM about the 2009 Subaru Outback 2.5i

Question type: Maintenance & Repair

I just inherited a 2009 Subaru Outback with auto transmission. My sister has
always gotten her maintenance in a timely manner and she told me it's
overdue for a transmission flush. She has always used the dealer service,
but they want $215 for the flush whereas a Monro quoted me around $150.
Is there any reason to not trust non-Subaru for these types of maintenance.
Also, there is 128,800 miles and she always used premium unleaded gas
while I always used regular unleaded. Does it matter after 100,000 miles. I
don't have the money she has for maintenance, but I will bite the bullet and
pay 1/3 more if I have to.
Thnaks,
Rose

4 Answers

48,800

Keep it simple! Look at the trans dip stick. If the fluid is pink or nearly clear light brown, it's ok. If gray or black then simply drain it and refill with 3.75 qts ATF. If still black after a day's driving repeat. FLUSHING the system involves BACK-flushing, which introduces great risk of sending dirt up through the sensitive valves. DON'T DO IT! Lots of shops like to sell flushes because they bought computerized equipment that back-flushes it automatically while they have lunch, picking up egregious fees for this dangerous service. Think of the transmission fluids as like in a digestive system...you NEVER want to push it up backwards!

3 people found this helpful.

If your Subaru says to use premium gas, do it. You are not saving yourself any money w/ cheaper gas. It will burn faster and you will hurt to many other things along the way. It was actually meant to run on better gas and uses it more efficiently. I tried the mid grade for some time and wish I had not. Just don't do it.

3,310

Huh? You're on the wrong thread. As well, NO Outbacks require 89, 91 nor 93 octane. Fed 87 is just fine.

1 people found this helpful.

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