Q: How Cooked Am I? Should I walk away, or repair?
Bought a 2015 Crosstrek back in May, 170k miles. It was well-maintained, physically in excellent shape, drove well, had maintenance records throughout it's one-owner lifetime, no codes. I inspected it to the best of my ability*, and found it to be in good shape. It's lived it's life in GA, CA and KY. No rust.
* spoilers
I've driven it about 2000 miles with no issues. Recently, every once in a while I'd smell a little burning coolant, but I couldn't find it on the engine or exhaust after searching. This weekend I got an intermittent Coolant Temp warning on a highway drive.
Got it home, and decided to flush coolant, replace thermostat and upper / lower hoses.
Opened the radiator cap and found... Wow. Apparently I hadn't checked this (see previous spoilers)?
Serious, long-term oil-in-coolant intermix and build-up (updated: OR some sort of stop leak additive). And yet the car has been driving error free 😳
Drained the coolant and it was still very liquid, but also very very brown. Removing and inspecting the overflow, I found brown residue along the walls.
Checking the engine oil - it appears to be clean. So oil-in-coolant yes, coolant-in-oil no.
I replaced the upper/lower hoses and thermostat.
But wait, there's more 🥺
Seeing the state of the radiator, I assumed this build-up had been working for a long time, and so I set about doing a flush.
I flushed with plain water and ran the engine for about 5-7 minutes, letting it get up to temp.
At the 7 minute mark, I suddenly had white smoke out of the tailpipe. Oh nooooo! I shut it down. I know enough about Subies to fear a head gasket leak.
I did a few other investigative part pulls to determine the extent of the damage / source of this intermixing:
1. How cooked is this engine? Can a teardown and reseal bring it back?
2. Is there anything I haven't considered in the above? Any tips or feedback?
3. Would you stick it out with this car, or walk?
Thanks in advance...
Bought a 2015 Crosstrek back in May, 170k miles. It was well-maintained, physically in excellent shape, drove well, had maintenance records throughout it's one-owner lifetime, no codes. I inspected it to the best of my ability*, and found it to be in good shape. It's lived it's life in GA, CA and KY. No rust.
* spoilers
I've driven it about 2000 miles with no issues. Recently, every once in a while I'd smell a little burning coolant, but I couldn't find it on the engine or exhaust after searching. This weekend I got an intermittent Coolant Temp warning on a highway drive.
Got it home, and decided to flush coolant, replace thermostat and upper / lower hoses.
Opened the radiator cap and found... Wow. Apparently I hadn't checked this (see previous spoilers)?

Drained the coolant and it was still very liquid, but also very very brown. Removing and inspecting the overflow, I found brown residue along the walls.
Checking the engine oil - it appears to be clean. So oil-in-coolant yes, coolant-in-oil no.
I replaced the upper/lower hoses and thermostat.
But wait, there's more 🥺
Seeing the state of the radiator, I assumed this build-up had been working for a long time, and so I set about doing a flush.
I flushed with plain water and ran the engine for about 5-7 minutes, letting it get up to temp.
At the 7 minute mark, I suddenly had white smoke out of the tailpipe. Oh nooooo! I shut it down. I know enough about Subies to fear a head gasket leak.
I did a few other investigative part pulls to determine the extent of the damage / source of this intermixing:
- Radiator: needs replacing - after flush, noticed water leaking from bottom of radiator, assume it's leaking / has been corroded. Assume that since water is thinner than the intermixed goop, it leaks through easier?
- PCV Union: replaced. Photos below. I didn't see any evidence of flow between coolant left and oil / vapor right... but replaced anyway.


- PCV Valve was clean / still rattling / replaced anyway
- Heater core: fittings appear clean, but assume goo is in the core. Replace? Heater also seems to only heat on one side?
- Thermostat: replaced as noted
- Coolant temp sensor: sensor was coated in goo
- Oil to coolant intermix has been happening a long time.
- Source is likely the upper oil pan o-rings?
- ...but this oil to coolant intermix caused a head gasket failure leading to the thick white smoke in the exhaust.
- I paid $6k for the car. Have put probably another $1k into it.
- I'm pretty handy and patient - and I feel like I could pull an engine and do the gasket and oil pan o-ring fix.
- OR... I could walk away and sell it now.
1. How cooked is this engine? Can a teardown and reseal bring it back?
2. Is there anything I haven't considered in the above? Any tips or feedback?
3. Would you stick it out with this car, or walk?
Thanks in advance...