2004 Ford Explorer, bought November 2015 with 131,000 on it. has 151,000 (20k in 2 years) 2007 Ford Focus bought early Feb 2016 with 198,000 on it - now has 208,500 (10k in in 1.5 years) 2011 Harley Davidson Street Glide bought November of 2014 with 26,850 on it - now has 41,000 (14k in 3 years) Every single one of those miles put on by me and 99.9999% of it in the lower half of NH (Concord and south). Man, I gotta lighten up my working hours so I can get away more!
Thanks. Only 4 kids! But with all the activities you never know who is going to be running who and their friends around. I buy the trucks older so I can afford the gas Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I get that! We've got 3. But I've got 110 miles round trip a day. I need the mileage And Honda has a nice big trunk!
2005 Silverado - 172,000. Bought it a few years ago with 141K. 2016 Impala - 41,500. Bought it a year ago with 27K on it. Let someone else take the initial depreciation hit. 1997 Town Car - 102,200. Dragged this out of a barn a month or so back. It’ll eventually be for my kid to drive when she gets her license.
1994 Ford Bronco 124,000 2012 Kia Sorento 82000 2015 Chevy Malibu 85000 This one is a company car, new 2018 Ford Fusion has already been ordered because this one is sooooo old!
2000 4runner, 4cl, 2wd: 238,000 I did the front wheel bearings and upper ball joints about a month ago. When I was doing pads and rotors I noticed a slight noise from the bearings so they needed to go. That's the only repair it's ever had. 1997 Toyota T100 4wd: 112,000 Bought it 5 years ago when the original owner died. It came with all the maintenance receipts, all from the dealership where it was purchased.
Love those Toyota's! Bought a 1987 4-runner, 4-cyl standard, 4wd brand new, had it for 13 years and sold it with 307,000 miles on it. Had to put in a gas tank (rusted out) and a timing chain (guide went south in the mid 200k's). Bought a 1995 4-runner in 2000 and ran it for 4 years. When I traded it in it had 140k on it. Bought the ex a Tacoma in 2000 and when he finally got rid of it in 2014 he had 200k on it and had wrecked it twice. If not for the wrecks there would have been no major repairs to it (except the recall for the frame)
'95 Dodge Ram 2500 284,000 '98 Ford F700 54,000 '82 GMC 3500 122,000 '03 Toyota Camry 132,000 Sold a '96 Camry in the spring. It had 269,000
My corolla has 261K. And climbing. The truck gets only about 6K-7K per year and comes in at 63K....only.
06 Ford E350 was work van & firewood hauler until we got a pickup, 297,950. Runs as good as the day I purchased it with 26,000. 01 Ford F250 (Tippy) current hauler. V-10 with 225,500. Again, runs like new and only thing I've done is rear brake lines, fuel pump & manifold studs along with tune up. Put a nicer box on it, but didn't have the liftgate back on for the last picture.
03 mazda protégé 5 wagon 225k Replaced motor about 3,000 miles ago with high comp jdm swap. It's needed about one of everything. Fun car, but definitely not a toyota. 93 ford f150 210k 06 honda pilot 140k I didn't know they made cars with under 100k.