Recalls are a well-established global practice; from time to time they are announced by almost all manufacturers of not only cars, but also any other industrial products. But since a car is considered a source of increased danger, it is recalls in the automotive industry that attract the most attention and cause the greatest resonance. Check if your car is covered by a recall campaign. Sometimes manufacturers will recall their cars because of substandard parts or workmanship and repair them for free, regardless of the warranty. This is called a recall campaign. More information on 2012 Subaru OUTBACK recalls can be found in this database. It may be useful to use online problems resource that shows automotive defect patterns, based on complaint data submitted by vehicle owners. The problems are organized into groups with data published by vehicle, component, and specific issue. See also an updated list of 2012 Subaru OUTBACK problems before buying a used car. In most cases, the recall is initiated by the manufacturer. But it also happens that it is forced to do so. The largest and most scandalous recall campaigns were those that were initiated by complaints and lawsuits from consumers through controlling state structures.
2012 Subaru Outback VIN 4S4BRBCC4C3243549 Search Result
# | Car ID | 534936 | Internal Car Identification Number |
Make | Subaru | The name of car manufacturer | |
Model | Outback | Model of a car | |
Trim | 2.5i Premium | Car Trim | |
Production Year | 2012 | The year of production | |
Wheel System | All-Wheel Drive | Type of Wheel System | |
Body Type | Wagon | Body Type of the vehicle. Like Convertible, Hatchback, Sedan, etc. | |
Maximum Seating | 5 seats | Total number of seats available. | |
Transmission | Automatic | Type of Transmission: detailed description | |
Engine Type | H4 | The engine configuration. Eg: I4, V6, etc. | |
Engine Displacement | 2500.0 | The measure of the cylinder volume swept by all of the pistons | |
Fuel Type | Gasoline | Dominant type of fuel ingested by the vehicle. | |
Fuel Tank Volume | 18.5 gal | Fuel tank's filling capacity in gallons | |
Wheelbase | 107.9 in | Wheelbase in inches | |
Width | 81 in | Width in inches | |
Height | 66.1 in | Height in inches | |
Back Legroom | 37.8 in | Back Legroom in inches | |
Power | 170 hp @ 5,600 RPM | Power and RPM produced by an engine. | |
Torque | 170 lb-ft @ 4,000 RPM | Torque produced by an engine. | |
Horsepower | 170.0 | Horsepower is the power produced by an engine. | |
City Fuel Economy | 22.0 | Fuel economy in city traffic in km per litre | |
Highway Fuel Economy | 29.0 | Fuel economy in highway traffic in km per litre | |
Listing Color | GREEN | Dominant color group from the exterior color. | |
Exterior Color | Green | Exterior dominant color of the vehicle | |
Interior Color | Brown (Beige) | Interior dominant color of the vehicle | |
Is New | False | If True means the vehicle was launched less than 2 years before 2020. | |
Owners | 3.0 | Counter of previous owners | |
Salvage | False | Shows if a car was salvaged | |
Theft Title | False | Shows if a car was previously stolen | |
Has Accidents | False | Shows if a car had accidents in the past | |
Frame Damaged | False | Shows if a car has damaged frame | |
Days On Market | 27 | The number of days a car is on the market | |
City | West Milford | City where vehicle has recently been located | |
Dealer ZIP | 07480 | ZIP code of a dealer | |
Seller | Ramsey Corp. | The entity name selling a car | |
Seller Rating | 3.6 | The rating of a car seller | |
Mileage | 145132.0 mi. | Mileage of a vehicle | |
Price | US$ 10899.0 | Last price of a vehicle in US$ | |
VIN | 4S4BRBCC4C3243549 | Vehicle Identification Number is a unique encoded string for every vehicle. |
Major Options / Build: Sunroof/Moonroof, Alloy Wheels, Bluetooth
Additional Description: RAMSEY CORP IS HOME OF AUTO LOAN SPECIALIST ! THIS VEHICLE COMES WITH A FREE 3 MONTH WARRANTY EXTENDED WARRANTIES AVAILABLE. FAMILY OWNED, NO COMMISSION SALES, NATIONWIDE SHIPPING RATES Heated Seating Xenon Headlamps 2012 SUBARU OUTBACK 2.5I PREMIUM 4S4BRBCC4C3243549 4 DOOR SPORT UTILITY 2.5L H4 F DOHC 16V ALL WHEEL DRIVE Somewhere amid the parade of crossovers and wagon-like vehicles is the Subaru Outback. Once merely a version of the Legacy wagon, which has since been discontinued, it’s now a household name among family-car shoppers. Indeed, a year after its redesign, the Outback has sold more than the competing Toyota Venza and Honda Accord Crosstour combined . The Outback’s formula for success is no secret. Where others have tried in so many ways to reinvent the crossover concept, the Outback is happy to nail all of its essentials: utility, capability and drivability. Trim levels include the four-cylinder Outback 2.5i and six-cylinder Outback 3.6R, each of which come in three versions: base, Premium and Limited (compare them here ). As with all Subarus, all-wheel drive is standard. The Outback was redesigned for 2010 you can compare that version with the 2011 Outback here . We evaluated the four-cylinder Outback last year this time around we tested a six-cylinder Outback 3.6R Limited. Quick With the Six The Outback’s base engine — a 170- horsepower four-cylinder — delivers leisurely acceleration, in large part because of a continuously variable automatic transmission that’s in no hurry to respond to your right foot. (A six-speed manual is standard, but we haven’t tested it.) Loaded with passengers, the four-cylinder drivetrain requires patience reaching highway speeds, and it strains to keep up under hard acceleration. That’s not the case with the optional 256-hp six-cylinder. It’s a muscular drivetrain, in part because it trades the CVT for a responsive five-speed automatic that’s not afraid to hold lower gears or kick down on the highway. Even loaded with cargo, our test car had the sort of torque to pull strongly around town, though getting up to highway speeds didn’t leave much extra power on tap. With the six-cylinder, towing capacity tops out at 3,000 pounds. That’s 500 pounds less than many competitors, but the four-cylinder Outback has a 2,700-pound rating — none too shabby for a four-banger. The combined EPA gas mileage estimates range from 20 mpg with the six-cylinder and automatic to 24 mpg with the four-cylinder and automatic. Both figures are competitive. Ride, Handling Braking Employing a car-based four-wheel-independent suspension since its mid-1990s inception, the Outback displays admirable ride quality. It soaks up bumps with little driver disturbance but maintains good control over stretches of broken pavement. Rough pavement can stunt a soft-riding car’s reflexes and leave it bobbing up and down, but the Outback suffers little of that. Steering and handling are good, if not as sharp as they were in the last Outback. Driving enthusiasts will appreciate the steering wheel’s heavy weight at low speeds, while average drivers will want more power assist for easier parking-lot maneuvers. On the highway, I could use a little less assist. Holding the wheel at 12 o’clock, it feels a bit too loose. Find a winding road, however, and the Outback handles well. The steering has good turn-in precision and little midcorner sloppiness. The nose pushes wide in hard corners, exacerbated by our tester’s all-season Continental ContiProContact tires, which didn’t offer much grip. Stomp hard on the gas coming out of a sweeping corner, though, and you can swing the tail out eventually. Credit the standard all-wheel drive, whose power distribution skews slightly rearward in six-cylinder Outbacks. All automatic Outbacks distribute power between the axles electronically the manual Outback uses a simpler viscous coupling that’s less proactive in doling out power when the wheels start to slip. Still, both systems distribute constant power to each axle. Many on-demand systems send power rearward only when a drive wheel begins to slip some allow you to enforce a 50/50 split via a locking center differential. We’ve driven previous Outbacks on trails, and the all-wheel drive — along with an impressive 8.7 inches of ground clearance — make for better capability than you’d expect in a crossover. Four-wheel-disc antilock brakes are standard, with larger discs installed on six-cylinder Outbacks. The pedal has linear response, making it easy to smooth out your stops. Cram the car full of passengers, and you’ll want to plan your stopping distances accordingly. Loaded down with some 500 pounds of cargo, our test car took significantly farther to come to a halt. Cabin Utility Roomier by almost 10 percent, the Outback’s cabin addresses some of its predecessor’s biggest issues — namely, backseat room. There’s plenty of it now, and abundant headroom, too. The front seats could use longer seat cushions for better thigh support, and drivers over 6 feet tall will want to be able to move the seat farther back. (I’m 5-foot-11, and I drove with the seat all the way back.) Our test car came outfitted in a nice grade of leather — it wouldn’t be out of place in an entry-level luxury car — but the grainier upholstery along the center console and door armrests doesn’t live up to the same quality, and both areas are short on padding. Chrome door handles and nicely textured faux-metal trim add an upscale touch, but our test car’s shiny faux-wood trim is among the worst of its kind. So is the optional navigation system . The graphics look dated, particularly once you get into the menus, and it all runs off old-school DVDs, not a hard drive. That makes for slow map and menu loading, and it requires you to put in additional map discs if you travel to new parts of the country. The map view has too few street labels, and overhead sunlight or polarized sunglasses render the whole display difficult to see. The system includes iPod/USB integration, but it locks out most functions while the car is moving. On a road trip and wanting a new iPod playlist? Better make a pit stop. Cargo volume behind the rear seat is a competitive 34.3 cubic feet, and the Outback’s wide, rectangular cargo area accommodates large cargo better than many. Fold the rear seats down, and the crossover has an impressive 71.3 cubic feet of space. Cargo Room Compared Base price w/auto Cargo room behind second row (cu. ft.) Cargo w/seats down (cu. ft.) 2011 Honda CR-V $21,545 35.7 72.9 2011 Toyota RAV4 $21,925 36.4* 73.0 2011 Chevrolet Equinox $22,745 31.4 63.7 2011 Subaru Outback $24,195 34.3 71.3 2010 Toyota Venza $26,275 34.4 70.1 2011 Ford Edge $27,220 32.2 68.9 2010 Nissan Murano $28,340 31.6 64.0 2010 Honda Accord Crosstour $29,670 25.7 51.3 *37.2 cubic feet in three-row model with third row folded. Source: Automaker information Reliability, Safety Features The prior Outback had above-average reliability, but the new one hasn’t been on the market long enough to gauge. In crash tests by the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, the Outback received the highest score, Good, in front, rear, side-impact and roof-crush tests. The current generation is an IIHS Top Safety Pick — which is no easy feat these days, given IIHS’ addition of roof-crush tests. Standard features include six airbags, antilock brakes and an electronic stability system . Click here for a full list of safety features. The Outback 2.5i comes with power windows and locks, remote entry, cruise control, air conditioning and a CD stereo with an auxiliary jack and steering-wheel audio controls. Move up to the 2.5i Premium or Limited, and you can have alloy wheels, power front seats, heated leather upholstery, dual-zone automatic climate control and an upgraded Harman Kardon stereo. A conventional moonroof (not the dual moonroof available in prior Outbacks) and the navigation system are optional. The six-cylinder Outback 3.6R comes standard with a five-speed automatic transmission the CVT automatic runs $1,000 in the 2.5i and 2.5i Premium (it’s standard on the 2.5i Limited). Load up a six-cylinder Outback, and the price tops out around $34,000. Outback in the Market Utility and crossovers go hand-in-hand, and the Outback comes up strong on all the basics. Like every Subaru, its success will be limited by the automaker’s insistence on standard all-wheel drive, which typically raises prices and lowers gas mileage — great in Maine, not so much in Mississippi. More than other carmakers, Subaru has managed to lessen the sting in both price and mileage, and nowhere is that more apparent than in the Outback: It boasts competitive mileage and a lower starting price than much of the front- drive competition. Add to that Subaru’s loyal owner base, and the Outback’s future looks bright.Trip Odometer,Intermittent Wipers,Power Brakes,Power Door Locks,Power Windows,Power Adjustable Seat,Tilt Steering,Cruise Control,Power Mirrors,All Wheel Drive,Cup Holder,Power-Assist Disc Brakes,Power Steering,Air Conditioning,Power Seat,Alloy Wheels,Climate Control,Traction Control System,Premium Audio,Anti-Lock Brakes (ABS),Engine: 2.5L SOHC 16 Valve 4-Cylinder,GVWR: 4,585 lbs
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