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  • Andy Kauffman

Welcome to the family! 1996 Subaru Sambar Dias Classic (KV3-5RC) ECVT van!

Updated: Sep 26

Our KV3's Birthday: 26 March 1996


On February 14th, 2022, we got our first Subaru Sambar, a 1996 Sambar Dias Classic KV3-5RC with the ECVT transmission and what I believe to be a factory-installed hydraulic wheelchair ramp. Yes, I heard the groans about the transmission. We'll discuss the ECVT stuff on a later post. This is what the van looked like the very first time we saw it!

Our 1996 KV3 at the HNL port

KV3 and my old GTI (6MT of course)

The GTI isn't a big car but it dwarfs the KV3!

We were really excited for this vehicle, but literally from the first moment my wife put it in gear, it has been a headache. We were really excited about the van because of not only the wheelchair lift for a family member we were caring for, but also because of the Classic front end. We hadn't seen that before, and instantly fell in love with it!


When my wife tried to drive it around the lot to head home, she stopped quickly and said, "Something doesn't feel right." I knew the vehicle was a CVT, but it definitely wasn't behaving right. The van would accelerate, but only to about 25 mph (40 kph) and the engine was at screaming high rpm. We ended up having to tow it home.


Over the next two years, we changed the transmission "brushes" (which was a new one to me, special to the ECVT I believe), the powder clutch itself (another "new one") - the brushes were around $100, and the powder clutch was around $550 before shipping. With the massive help from a friend who's a life-long pro mechanic, got the powder clutch changed and thought we were good. Then, when I was ready to drive it to the Honolulu side (Kapahulu) to get the VIN inspected to start the registration process finally - the engine was surging in the van any time I was on anything other than flat ground. The engine would finally go into gear and do ECVT things... and then the damn surging problem. Some diagnosis and checking with online groups led me to believe that there was a problem with the gas / gas tank. The only real way to fix that was going to be to drop, drain, and clean the gas tank, get a new fuel filter, and then as the books say, "assembly is the reversal of disassembly."



I'm sure for some, dropping a gas tank is easy-peasey, but it was a struggle for us. From hoses we didn't originally see while it was in place (the ones coming off the right side of the tank in that picture) to lines and stuff along the center of the vehicle that had to be removed, etc, it was quite a chore. Not only that, everyone online kept saying to take the tank to a radiator shop and they could clean it with some special sauce that would clean out the crud. (it was nasty, orange-ish, and filled with rust flakes) I will make a separate maintenance entry regarding that whole tank experience, but I found out no radiator shop on O'ahu will touch a gas tank anymore.


This vehicle finally got registered in August, 2024 and now officially has plates and a Hawai'i safety inspection. Now if I could just get the dang thing running reliably, I could put it up for sale. Fingers crossed we can find someone who will be able to use the wheelchair lift.

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