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The Subaru Outback is an automotive nameplate used by the Japanese automaker Subaru for two different SUV-themed vehicles: a Legacy-derived crossover station wagon, the Outback (1994–present, also sold as Legacy Outback (Japanese: スバル・レガシィアウトバック, Hepburn: Subaru Regashi Autobakku) in some markets), and an Impreza-derived off-road themed hatchback, the Outback ...
Subaru F-9X (1985) Subaru BLT (1987) Subaru F-624 Estremo (1987) Subaru Jo-Car (1987) Subaru SVX (1989, entered production as the Alcyone SVX) Subaru SRD-1 (Experimental design study introduced in 1990) Subaru Amadeus (1991, shooting-brake version of the SVX) Subaru CM1 (1991) Subaru Hanako (1991) Subaru Rioma (1991) Subaru Jusmin (1993) Subaru ...
The (Japanese: Subaru EZ series) was introduced in 1999 in the Japanese market, in the Subaru Outback, and in 2000 in the United States market, also in the Outback. It is a flat-six, 24-valve, quad-cam engine with an aluminium block and heads.
Usage: 1988–1991 Subaru XT, 1990–2009 Subaru Legacy, 1992–1997 Subaru Alcyone SVX, and all Subarus 1995–2009; The Ford Motor Company also uses a transmission on some Ford, Kia Motors, Mercury, and Mazda products called the F-4EAT, which shares some similarities with the Subaru, since they are both manufactured by Jatco.
The Safari Rally event in 1990 saw two Subaru Legacys finish the rally, with one car driven by Patrik Njiru winning in the Group N category. During the 1990 Safari Rally, 58 vehicles entered but only 10 cars crossed the finish line. Group N is a designation noting that the car is nearly identical to showroom models.
In 1995 AWD was so popular that for the 1997 model year, Subaru decided to make AWD standard equipment in all vehicles produced for the North American market from that year to today's current date, excluding the Subaru BRZ. The '96-'99 Outback models all used a version of the EJ25D engine. All basic trim levels included sedan and wagon versions.