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Frank, if take you any more test drives be sure to get the car over 55 or 65 MPH. I rented a 2007 Subaru Legacy FWD and it was fine around town even up to 35MPH, but once I got it up to highway speeds on the interstate it was very NOISY. Transmitted noise and vibration were unacceptable. I rented a Toyota Corolla in 2008 that was amazingly quiet, my wife and I just looked at one another in disbelief, it was as quiet as much more expensive cars. Scotty
Well...Ok, now I'll chime in...AWD is only FWD unless front wheel slippage is detected, then the rear wheels kick in. So yea, while AWD does technically have more moving parts, half of them aren't doing anything under the vast majority of driving conditions.
Yes, except for the BRZ, all recent Subarus use full time, symmetrical all wheel drive.
They mechanically run all four wheels all the time? Like a 30 year old 4x4 truck?
Saw that, but your question is post #26, so it made me think maybe Mike didn't provide enough detail in his explanation for ya.
Actually, what you describe is "full wheel drive." For a long time I didn't know the difference either, until a friend explained it to me. Here's a good, short, explanation.http://www.digitaltrends.com/cars/whats-the-difference-between-four-wheel-drive-and-all-wheel-drive/
I know that's probably not written for car people, but it's somewhat too-overly-simplified in that it equates normal 4WD systems to a locking differential.The difference is not small:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mkSiJ3UZlso