Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Subaru owners: compared to a V6 isn’t the 4 cylinder (only available engine) underpowered? And if turbocharged, is the turbo engagement sudden or unnoticeable?
Subaru owner and total non-car-person here. I see all these assertions it's underpowered ... I guess? I drive the speed limit, or more often under the speed limit in heavy DC area traffic. Merging in traffic does not require a ton of oomph. It just never really comes up for me. I could not tell you if turbo engagement happens at all, which might mean it's unnoticeable or that I don't use it.
The car handles uphills really well, if that's relevant.
Anonymous wrote:Subaru owners: compared to a V6 isn’t the 4 cylinder (only available engine) underpowered? And if turbocharged, is the turbo engagement sudden or unnoticeable?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Subaru owners: compared to a V6 isn’t the 4 cylinder (only available engine) underpowered? And if turbocharged, is the turbo engagement sudden or unnoticeable?
Subaru owner and total non-car-person here. I see all these assertions it's underpowered ... I guess? I drive the speed limit, or more often under the speed limit in heavy DC area traffic. Merging in traffic does not require a ton of oomph. It just never really comes up for me. I could not tell you if turbo engagement happens at all, which might mean it's unnoticeable or that I don't use it.
The car handles uphills really well, if that's relevant.
Anonymous wrote:Subaru owners: compared to a V6 isn’t the 4 cylinder (only available engine) underpowered? And if turbocharged, is the turbo engagement sudden or unnoticeable?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those ads are great.I have an Outback and think they're too ubiquitous to have any particular reputation at this point, but that's also a super weird reason not to buy a car.
I love those ads. But I also love the more recent ads with the dogs driving, and I don't think people assume Subaru owners all have dogs. It's a really common car at this point.
FWIW, I'm straight and drive a Subaru (although I do have a dog). My gay sibling drives a Honda Element. We grew up in an all-Volvo household.
I definitely assume a Subaru owner has a dog.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those ads are great.I have an Outback and think they're too ubiquitous to have any particular reputation at this point, but that's also a super weird reason not to buy a car.
I love those ads. But I also love the more recent ads with the dogs driving, and I don't think people assume Subaru owners all have dogs. It's a really common car at this point.
FWIW, I'm straight and drive a Subaru (although I do have a dog). My gay sibling drives a Honda Element. We grew up in an all-Volvo household.
Anonymous wrote:Outback is kind of the perfect all-around swiss army knife of vehicles. Not too big, not too small, fits a lot of cargo when you need to, not too cheap, not too expensive, safe, good in all weather conditions, you get a lot of value for your money, plus good resale value.
They're not a top-of-the-charts brand in reliability (that crown currently goes to Mazda, Lexus, and Toyota) but aren't bad in that department at all. Though it is slightly model-dependent as the Subaru Ascent was rated one of Consumer Reports' 10 least reliable vehicles of 2020. The Outback fared better.
They aren't for those who want dynamic handling or quick acceleration, or great infotainment, but many people don't care about that stuff.
Anonymous wrote:Those ads are great.I have an Outback and think they're too ubiquitous to have any particular reputation at this point, but that's also a super weird reason not to buy a car.