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cfz2882

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Joined
Feb 9, 2010
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Location
Belle Fourche,SD
anyone have any cars/trucks with over 200,000 miles or know of any that have ran up
impressive miles? I have a few :
1982 chevy z28-240000mi. engine upgraded in '94,so not original but this thing just
keeps going year after year....
1989 dodge raider-240000mi-engine/drivetrain original,but had to replace the heads
at 230,000-a junk yard provided good heads,from a '94 dodge stealth.
1991 oldsmobile-240000mi-3.8 engine has never needed repairs,but i have had to
repair/replace the CS130 alternator about 5 times during the last 15 yrs...
At work there is 1993 ford f150 with 310000miles never has needed any engine
repairs,but the automatic tranny is on it's 3rd rebuild and i had to rebuild
the rear axle at about 300000mi.
Saw a beater '83 benz 300D with 480000mi.body was rough but the 5cyl diesel
still ran good!
 
Not uncommon around here.  One cousin has a 2000 Impala with 224,000 miles and going strong, another has Gran Prix with 267,000 in great shape too.   No major repairs to either of these cars either, just routine maintenance.
 
A friend of ours had a 86' Lincoln Town car that just made it to 400,000 miles. The engine and drive train were still rarin' to go, but the body just couldn't do it. All the door panels inside were cracked and fell off the doors. The seat mounts for the front seat had rusted through. Strangely enough the only things to rust on the car. None of the power windows worked. The fabric covering the seats was long gone with exposed foam everywhere.
But the engine was never overhauled. I think it had a 460V8 in it. So the gas mileage was never great. It was replaced with a 2005 Ford Explorer.
 
The Mighty Geo turns 18 this month--old enough to vote! My 1994 Geo Prizm (a rebadged Toyota Corolla) has 248,000+ miles on it and is still going strong. I drive it 75 mph on the highway and get around 40 mpg. It's been by far the most reliable car I've ever owned--still on the original clutch, exhaust system, etc.

Naturally, I've been eyeing new cars as this one will eventually need to be replaced. I like the new Ford Focus, but Consumer Reports says its automated manual transmission is annoyingly glitchy at very low speeds in stop-and-go traffic or when creeping through parking lots. I'd like to support my only remaining local car dealer, but until Ford finds a fix for this problem, I won't buy a Focus. The Fusion is a nice-looking car, but I'm really only interested in a small car---been spoiled by great mileage and ease of parking.
 
I know someone who had a 1982 or 83 Mercedes 300D that they had just over 500,000 miles on, no major work ever, just had it repainted so the day it was traded in after 24 years it still looked new.

 

My aunt currently has a 2002 Ford Windstar that last I recall was at about 225,000 original miles, and they were all hard miles as this is her delivery van for her flower shop, engine and transmission are still factory and it runs great, just the sliding doors and the rear quarter panels are starting to rust out
 
Daily Drivers

My drivers are a 1991 Corolla Wagon and a 1987 Nissan D21 "hard Body" pickup. The Toyota was a Texas car until a few years ago so there is no rust on it and it is in great shape. I love it because it is a stick shift, which is a rare combination. The car has 248k on it and runs like a top. I recently replaced the valve cover gasket and the top of the engine is super clean up top. The 87 Nissan is also in good shape and has 240k or so on it. A fresh valve adjustment and clutch cylinder fixed it right up and it is my major appliance hauler.

-Tim
 
HIGH MILEAGE CARS

I have always kept cars a long time but have only had three go over 200,000 miles.

 

The first was my 1994 Dodge Caravan C/V work van, no repairs on the 3.3 L engine two repairs on the 4SP Ultra-Drive transmission, but it was sold and left under its own power with the original transmission.

 

The 2nd was my 1994 Chrysler Town & Country AWD mini- van it has 212,000 on it and still runs but I took it off the road when Smitty gave me a [ new to me ] 2005 T&C with only 35,000 miles on it. I do miss the AWD, the 1994 was truly a great van, it had every option except the real plastic wood siding LOL.

 

The third we are still using for our business is a 1996 Plymouth Voyager van that my brother Jeff and his partner custom ordered new in 1996. It has 248,000 miles on it, its a 2.4 L 4 , and 4 SP Ultra- Drive. The engine had a head gasket around 130,000 miles and a Jasper RB transmission around 185,000 miles, this one is still in daily use.
 
My Two

Have two high mileage daily drivers: 2000 Chevy Astro Van - 304,400 on it; had lifters replaced at 197,000 and minor tranny work at 245,000; running strong everyday and it looks good. Also have a 1994 Ford Clubwagon Diesel 7.3; at 298,000, the engine is strong; but the body is starting to rust significantly (wheel wells bad); not sure if it can be or is worth the repairs,although it's great for hauling appliances. Only routine repairs - glow plugs, fuel filter changed etc... All things considered (4 drivers on each vehicle, never garaged, sometimes don't get oil changes on time, etc...) both are doing very well. AC has had numerous problems on the Ford Van, think it's on the 3rd compressor and not working right now, will have it checked when the weather gets warmer.
 
I used to own a 1980 Renault 20 hatch which did 485,000 km. I had it converted to LPG at about 180,000 km. 16 km = 10 miles, you work it out. Fabulous car, at that distance its engine, clutch and gearbox had never been opened or separated, just routine maintenance. That was the distance when I sold it, it had a later owner, who knows how many more km it covered?

Also later I had a 1992 Mitsubishi Magna wagon (Magna is the Australian market name for the Diamante) and it was a real trooper. By 2007 it had done 300,000 km I thought it was getting a little long in the tooth so I sold it. At that time it was running great, and still looked and drove like a new car. Not a single rattle or squeak anywhere. My neighbour bought it from me, it is still good and has now done 500,000 km. (Yes, half a million) It has had a "new, second hand" engine fitted though - the old one overheated and cracked its block. That car too is on LPG.

My partner drives a little 1999 Holden Barina - Aussie market name for Opel Corsa - which is a fantastc little car. Now done 260,000 km. Never missed a beat, and a great little car to drive too. We plan to replace it late this year or early next year.

I now have a 2007 Peugeot 307 1.6 diesel wagon - 85,000 km so far, it is great and I plan to keep it till it is about 10 years old. It should have plenty of numbers on the clock by then.
 
My 2004 Suburban has about 190,000 on it right now. It runs like a champ. I bought it from my oldest brother in 2008 with 140,000 on it at the time. He's a lawyer in CT and drives a bunch. IT does have some rust on the rear bumper from the CT winters.

We have a 1993 F150 w/ 235,000 miles awaiting a tranny rebuild but the straight six purrs like a kitten.

Our box truck here at the shop is fast approaching 160,000 miles.

I believe in driving a vehicle for as many miles as possible. I can't afford to buy new for my personal use (even though we scraped $ together to get a transit connect for the business).
 
Mine.

My Volvo 240 is approaching 150,000. I just don't drive that much. My roommate's '82 Volvo 240 wagon, however, is around 240,000 and runs like a swiss watch.

Repairs are cheaper than payments (but good maintenance keeps even repairs reasonable).

Dave
 
saw a quote recently

"200,000 miles is the new 100,000 miles". True.
Most cars with reasonable mainenance easily make that mark these days.
I have 128k on mine and no intention of buying anytime soon.
 
Buy Them at 100,000

When I was working I commuted between around 2,ooo miles weekly. I had a car and fuel allowance. Most of my co-worker leased cars and always worried their high miles penalties. I looked for a nice Town Car with 100,000 and usally paid about $3,000. The cars were comfortable, dependable and capacious for carrying samples and equipment. I would drive them until they reached 300,000 miles or began to nickel and dime for small repairs. IIt wan't uncommon to sell the old Town Car for 1,500, There was never a major repair or any issues with drive train, windows or air conditioning, but more likely starter, alternator, wheel bearings, front end etc. My last town car which I totaled only had 83,000 when I bought and 151,000 when it was totaled. It was absolutely pristine.[this post was last edited: 2/3/2012-10:15]

mixfinder++2-3-2012-09-48-4.jpg
 
My 1998 Passat turns 14 in May of this year and just hit 150,000 miles. Never had a major repair or failure, though suggested maintenance can be costly when timing belts etc. are due to be changed. It's a manual and has the original clutch and transmission. I live less than a mile from the dealership, and get a free loaner car (there is an Enterprise counter at the dealer) when I have servicing, so I've never searched for a less expensive VW specialty mechanic. The latter is a good choice if one is close by and if you have alternate transportation options.

The engine is the 1.8T (still used in some VWs, though now it's a 2.0T), the chip of which was reprogrammed to increase turbo boost so that it gets about 205 HP at the wheels, instead of the stock 150 HP for the 98 models. At the time, VW only offered one other engine choice for Passat, a rather lackluster V6 making 190 HP. The 1.8T was offered in 170-180 HP versions in other VWs (Jetta, GTI, etc.), leading fans of the car to suspect that the engine was "de-tuned" (tuned to the low end of its HP potential) so as not to compete with the V6. In later models, the same 1.8T engine was up-tuned to get 170-180 (the same engine, when coupled with a larger turbo and intercooler, made 225 HP in the Audi TT).

As whirlpool suggested above in his Lincoln Towncar post, what will eventually do the car in is not the drivetrain, but the declining availability of off-the-shelf replacement parts (and this isn't a collectible car, so it's not worth paying way more to have stuff custom made). I recently had this problem with the rubber door gaskets. Two of the three were shot. In the rear doors, the cloth trim along the top of the space for the door (ie between window and roof liner) is part of the door gasket, and the cloth began to separate and droop, no way to repair it. I was able to find the replacement parts (which weren't all that expensive, maybe $50 each) and had them replaced at an auto interior specialist. On the driver door, the rubber was starting to wear away because the sill is sort of high, and after years of my right foot rubbing against the gasket where I exit the car, the rubber began to wear away. This part is no longer available, but the interior guy was able to make a patch from the rubber being discarded from the rear door gaskets. It works but doesn't look stock.

A year ago, the glove box latch broke, so that I could no longer keep the box closed. Unfortunately, they didn't sell just the door or latch, you had to buy an entire new glove box plus door/latch, which cost about $250 in parts alone. However, driving around with a glove box that won't stay closed is a safety issue (makes car look as if someone broke into it) plus it makes it hard to have a front seat passenger. All of the interior trim is fine at this point, but if something goes, sooner or later I won't be able to replace it. [note: they did sell separate doors for newer models, but not for a 98, and the box had been redesigned since 98, so that a door for a newer model would not fit my glove box; as a result, both box and door required replacement].

The only thing I've never bothered to repair is the cruise control. The switch is broken, and in order to replace it, the entire steering assembly has to be replaced. The switch is inexpensive, but the labor (at least at the dealer) is not. There may be a cruise control specialty shop that could do the work for less, but I've never looked into it because there are few opportunities to use cruise control on California freeways!! (I don't mean that it's stop and go, but you have to change speeds, accelerate and/or slow down, rather than cruise along at the same speed).

I only put about 900 miles a month on the car. It is garaged, and we don't have salt or sand winter issues here, only rain. I have two music rehearsals a week at a venue 25 miles away, and that accounts for 400 of the 900 monthly miles; with the music activity, I would likely rack up only 500/month, since the office is only two freeway exits from the house.
 
 

 

I used to have a 1989 Chevy Caprice that was a California Highway Patrol car.    I bought it from the CHP with 98K and sold it 6-7 years later with 160K when I bought a Lexus.

 

It was a 1993 Lexus LS400 with 168K on it.   Everyone I spoke with before purchasing the car (mechanics at dealerships, Lexus engineers at the local corporate level and others) told me these early Lexus sedan was SO over built, because they wanted to do well against BMW, MBZ & Audi, that 300K miles with only regular maintnence is NO PROBLEM at all!    I bought the car with 168K and sold it about 8 years later with 202K on it.   It still ran perfectly, drove well, was very comfortable and quiet etc.   The only reason I sold it is, I'd only put 2400 miles on it the previous 4 years, because the car I'm driving now literally get twice the mpg of the Lexus.   The Lexus would get 14-16 mpg around town / 20-21 on the highway (PREMIUM gas!) and my current driver get's 31 - 33 in town and 39 - 40 on the highway. 

 

Kevin

 
 
1969 VW bug 235,000 miles on it when the 3rd engine went out.  Sold for $500.00 1978

1974 Buick Regal engine died on it 1993 with 250,00 on it gave to a freind for parts to his 1979 Century

1976 AMD Hornet wagon 9our kid hauler) Straight 6 3 speed column shift with OD 210,000 sold to a kid that communted from New Orleans to Baton Rouge to school.

1976 Chrysler New Yorker 223,000 Sold in 1992 when we bought the Lincoln Town Car

Town Car 1992 280,000 nothing replaced.  In 2005 the air suspension went out and decided to get a smaller car the Fusion.  Got it still

 

These were my cars.

 

Wife we had a 1988 Mercury Sable traded it in for a Saturn in 1999 it had 260,00 on it and at 180,000 had the transmission replaced. 

Have traded hers more often as she now commutes 26 miles one way freeway for 19 miles then stop and go the rest.

 

 
 
Don't currently have a high mileage vehicle, but have had in the past.
Step-Dad drove a 1964 Pontiac Catalina with 278,000. It had the 389 and 4 speed roto-hydromatic tranny. Other than shocks and springs, battery, water pump, was still running all original when he sold it before we moved from Illinois. It was a rust bucket, but ran and ran. Step-Dad said to buy them with higher miles, then they were basically free, let someone else take the depreciation. If they start giving problems send them on their way.

Mom and I had a 1991 Plymouth Voyager van 2.5 L engine. I had repo'd it when I was working at a Credit Union and we didn't have any offers so I bid and got it. At the time it had 111,000 on it, our plan was to drive it a few months and then trade it. Ended up keeping it five years and 167,000 miles. It was starting to show tranny problems decided to trade it then.

My nephew drove a 1990 Toyota Carola his entire time in college. over 350,000.
 

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