Junkyard Find: 1979 Subaru GL Wagon

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

The Malaise Subaru Apocalypse is in full swing in Colorado, if we are to judge from the selection of old Leones in Denver junkyards these days. Yesterday, we saw this ’82 GL “Cyclops”, but that was just the beginning of the Subaru death toll in this yard. A few rows away, I found this brown GL wagon, a little rustier than the ’82 but still appearing to have plenty of life left in it. Is anyone restoring these things?

When you’re driving a brown Malaise econo-wagon, you’re pretty well obligated to sport brown plaid upholstery.

The same rule applies when it comes to orange and white tape stripes: you must have them!

I thought that speedometers on US-market cars from the 1979 through 1982 model years were required to max out at 85 MPH. You know, for safety. Either Subaru found some loophole for this car, or someone swapped in a later 120 MPH speedo. Imagine, this car doing 120!

I’ve worked on a few of these things, and I always thought they were pretty unreliable and shoddy next to contemporary Hondas and Toyotas (though Malaise Subarus were built like bank vaults next to Mitsubishis of the period). The quality of Subaru products improved as much in the 1990s as did Hyundai stuff, which may explain the hindsight-based perception that the old GLs were bulletproof (cue the enraged commenters who got 400,000 trouble-free miles out of their Malaise Subies). Were I transported back to 1979 and found myself shopping for a four-wheel-drive car, I’d go for the less civilized but sturdier AMC Eagle SX/4. Still, it’s sad to see all the old (non-BRAT) Subarus getting crushed now.









Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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  • Jimal Jimal on Jun 29, 2011

    1. The brown plaid is just fantastic. 2. The last time I worked on one of these was when I was in Technical School, so either late 1988 or early 1989. What alarmed me about working on Subarus was (I don't know if it is still this way) that they were famous for random design changes through the model year. When ordering parts, not only did you have to provide the year, model and engine size, but also the production date of the car. Coming from working on GM cars where part interchangeability was measured in years, that was weird. 3. By the time most of these went to the scrap yard, they picked up that distinctive Subaru exhaust leak sound (the aforementioned lack of interchangeability made it difficult/impossible to fix leaks in a cost effective manner). I've always found it funny that some people take a perfectly good STi and spend more money on an exhaust system that ends up sounding like one of these old beaters.

    • See 4 previous
    • Sam P Sam P on Jun 30, 2011

      @Wagen ZKWs and ALs were installed interchangeably on the E46 (seemingly depending on what was in stock at the time). There doesn't seem to be any rhyme or reason to them, which is fine except for the fact that the ZKW lights toast their projector bowls - which requires replacement or the aftermarket Lightwerks TFX upgrade. The AL lights don't have that issue, thankfully (I have AL lights).

  • Cheezeweggie Cheezeweggie on Jun 30, 2011

    The sheetmetal on earlier Subaru's was stamped from recycled Chevy Vegas...

  • Scotes So I’ll bite on a real world example… 2020 BMW M340i. Michelin Pilot Sport 4S. At 40k now and I replaced them at about 20k. Note this is the staggered setup on rwd. They stick like glue when they are new and when they are warm. Usually the second winter when temps drop below 50/60 in the mornings they definitely feel like they are not awake and up to the task and noise really becomes an issue as the wear sets in. As I’ve made it through this rainy season here in LA will ride them out for the summer but thinking to go Continental DWS before the next cold/rainy season. Thoughts? Discuss.
  • Merc190 The best looking Passat in my opinion. Even more so if this were brown. And cloth seats. And um well you know the best rest and it doesn't involve any electronics...
  • Calrson Fan Battery powered 1/2 ton pick-ups are just a bad idea period. I applaud Tesla for trying to reinvent what a pick-up truck is or could be. It would be a great truck IMO with a GM LS V8 under the hood. The Lightening however, is a poor, lazy attempt at building an EV pick-up. Everyone involved with the project at Ford should be embarrassed/ashamed for bringing this thing to market.
  • Jeff I like the looks of this Mustang sure it doesn't look like the original but it is a nice looking car. It sure beats the looks of most of today's vehicles at least it doesn't have a huge grill that resembles a fish.
  • Doc423 SDC's are still a LONG way off, 15-20 years minimum.
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