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Top vehicles for longevity

rottidawg
Explorer
Explorer
http://www.roadandtrack.com/car-culture/a28278/top-cars-to-make-it-over-200000-miles/?src=socialflow...
2012 Chevy 2500HD LTZ CCSB 4x4 gas
2012 Four Wheel Camper Hawk
2008 Harley Street Glide
32 REPLIES 32

2001400ex
Explorer
Explorer
Pauljdav wrote:
BB_TX wrote:
garyp4951 wrote:
Wow, I guess the commercials have been wrong.

Oh, come on! Don't destroy my faith in truth in advertising. :B



Interesting about the impalla rental car. I like chevy and my truck is a chevy. I rented an impalla last year and hated it.
I did not know it was an older design.

I would try one again if i knew it was a better platform.


Yeah now days in a rental car, the Impala fleet car is the same interior as the old models from 2010 and such. My co worker rented one last year and they said the interior was way outdated even tho it was brand new. We looked it up online and the interior of an Impala that a consumer would buy was way different. Chevy does that with fleet cars now, which could be a mistake since it's really advertising for them. I bought my wife a new 06 Impala partially because I'd rented an Impala, Camry, charger, etc. In the same class and the Impala was the nicest at the time.
2017 Forest River Stealth SA2816
2020 GMC Denali 3500 Duramax
Anderson ultimate fifth wheel hitch

VernDiesel
Explorer
Explorer
It's mostly about maintenance & or abuse.
Had a one owner 98 Pontiac Grand Am with the Olds Quad 4 that I sold with 250,000. It ate 3 water pumps & was a cheap car & worn out.

Father in law bought a 91 Caravan 3.3 new that I bought and years later sold with 250,000. I rebuilt the transmission at 130,000. It was still very solid.

Father in law bought a new 89 Buick Park Ave with Buick 3800 V6. Sold it to his son who later sold it to his son who later sold it with 315,000. None of these were rebuilt.

My current 14 Ram Ecodiesel used for transporting new TTs from the manufacturers to dealerships has 340,000.
Transportr TT & boats RAM EconoDiesel Factory TBC, Tow mirrors, Hitch camera, Axle to frame air bags, Tune w turbo brake, Max tow 9,200 CGAR 7,800 CVWR 15,950 axle weights 3,340 steer 2,260 drive Truck pushed head gasket at 371k has original trans at 500k

Slowmover
Explorer
Explorer
Truck in sig at 210k. $500 in repairs since new.
1990 35' SILVER STREAK Sterling, 9k GVWR
2004 DODGE RAM 2WD 305/555 ISB, QC SRW LB NV-5600, 9k GVWR
Hensley Arrow; 11-cpm solo, 17-cpm towing fuel cost

wowens79
Explorer III
Explorer III
My 2002 Chevy with the 6.0 gasser with 205,000 miles has been real solid. Only had to replace the starter years ago, and the fuel pump at 204k miles. It still has the original brake pads.

We just past my wife's Honda Pilot to my daughter when she turned 16, and the Pilot has 245,000 miles. It's been basically trouble free also.

The wife put 240,000 on her Honda Accord before she got the Pilot

He just bought a new Honda CR-V that she is planning to drive til the wheels fall off.

If you take care of them, there is no need to get a new car until you are pushing 200k unless you just like to spend money, or you have a good used diesel truck you want to sell me in about a year ;).
2022 Ford F-350 7.3l
2002 Chevy Silverado 1500HD 6.0l 268k miles (retired)
2016 Heritage Glen 29BH
2003 Flagstaff 228D Pop Up

danrclem
Explorer
Explorer
I'm basically a Ford person but I have a 2001 Cavalier that my son bought new and he wasn't easy on it. I got it from him to finish up my work career which I did by recently retiring. This little car has 227,000 miles on it and still runs good. I've had several other problems and the frame is rusting out but other than using a little oil the engine transmission combo has been bullet proof.

austingta
Explorer
Explorer
Dark-colored cars last longer if you drive during the day and light-colored cars last longer if you drive at night. Duh.
Frank Brooks Austin TX
2018 F 150 King Ranch max tow package with 3.55 gears
Published towing weight limit 13200
Payload per sticker 1464

JAC1982
Explorer
Explorer
Lessmore wrote:
JAC1982 wrote:
Lessmore wrote:
JAC1982 wrote:
I feel like GM and Ford have switched places in the past 10-15 years though (especially after the bailout). Ford has stepped up their game, whereas GM has declined. 15 years ago, it was different. So, I guess we'll see how this list looks in 15 years from now ๐Ÿ™‚

This is just anecdotal evidence, but earlier this year, my 2016 Explorer was getting body work done on it, and they gave me a GMC Acadia rental car. The difference in quality and handling was like night and day. The GMC felt cheap on the interior, and had "mushy" handling. I didn't find it pleasant to drive. I couldn't speak to the engine because mine is a Sport with the EcoBoost 3.5, and the Acadia was just an NA engine. I looked up the pricing on it, and it was comparable to the Explorer of the same trim level. Not sure why anybody would buy one over the other other than brand loyalty.


We bought new, a 2015 Chevy Impala LT, 3.6 V6 with the new style body. We've driven on long trips and day in, day out as a regular vehicle. Our winters go down to 30-35 below...sometimes colder (-40) and our summer temps go up to about 90-95 F. Roads here are in a word...terrible.

So far....nothing....I mean nothing...has gone wrong with it....touch wood.

As far as Fords go...not a lot of current experience with them. We did consider a new 2015 Ford Explorer with the non aspirated 3.5 liter V6 and AWD.

We chose the Impala, but I wouldn't of had any issues with choosing the Explorer.


I had a friend who bought a new Asian made vehicle...nothing but big issues after 3 years of ownership. He eventually traded it in.

A family member bought a new North American made 4WD SUV...all sorts of problems.

So who knows really. Is it sometimes just a question of Russian roulette and you pays your money and you takes your choice...and then hope for the best ?

Sometimes you get a lemon, sometimes you get a good vehicle, no matter the make. Most of my vehicles over the past 50 years have been mostly ok. Had some real stinkers though. I've had many different makes....American made, Asian, European.

I think the best way to do things for me,after all my vehicle experience is...if you can afford it...then buy new, get the factory extended warranty, trade it in just before the warranty is over. Start again.


See, and we had an Impala rental car, brand new, 400 miles on it, and we didn't like it either. We also have a 2016 Fusion Titanium with the 4 cyl Eco Boost which we purchased used with 25,000 miles on it and I felt like the Impala didn't even compare.... now, slightly different vehicle class, but I just didn't feel like Impala stacked up. It's fine on it's own, but not in comparison.


You can't compare the Impala rental car with my Impala. The Impala rental car is called the 'Impala Limited' and is based on the old Impala platform that has been around since 2000. The 'Limited' is still built for fleet orders only, such as Taxis, police package cars, rental fleets.

My Impala is a newer design built on the Upsilon 11 platform, designed in Europe with a lot of Opel of Germany involvement. Completely different car, but GM by using the same name...with the exception of the 'Limited' moniker certainly doesn't make things clear.

The newer Buick sedan...LaCrosse and some Cadillac models are also based on this newer GM platform.

The 'new' Impala platform...again NOT the Impala Limited fleet order (Taxi, Police, Rental) has accumulated a number of accolades from consumer magazines and enthusiast magazines.

By calling two different platforms....one platform a newer design premium platform and the other an old, past it's prime platform (actually known as the W platform)...is a typical GM marketing blunder.

They make some real good cars but their marketing sometimes just causes ๐Ÿ˜ž huge confusion among the consumer.


I dunno, it looked just like a new Impala. Not the old style. Either way, we didn't like it. But, the in laws thought it was nice and said they'd buy one if they were buying a car. Personal preference I guess. Quality issues aside, I also think most new GMs are not stylish, they really need to step up their design game.
2020 Keystone Montana High Country 294RL
2017 Ford F350 DRW King Ranch
2021 Ford F350 SRW Lariat Tremor

OH48Lt
Explorer
Explorer
80% of Chevy trucks are still on the road.

The other 20% made it home......
2017 Ford F-150 Crew Cab 4x4 3.5 EcoBoost
2014 Cruiser RV Fun Finder 215WKS
2015 Harley Road Glide Special in Amber Whiskey
2019 Mustang Bullitt
Yamaha Grizzly 660 (his)
Polaris Sportsman 500 H.O.(hers)

Pauljdav
Explorer
Explorer
BB_TX wrote:
garyp4951 wrote:
Wow, I guess the commercials have been wrong.

Oh, come on! Don't destroy my faith in truth in advertising. :B



Interesting about the impalla rental car. I like chevy and my truck is a chevy. I rented an impalla last year and hated it.
I did not know it was an older design.

I would try one again if i knew it was a better platform.

Hannibal
Explorer
Explorer
From our family's experience over the decades, I can't disagree with the lists. Our F250 and Toyota Prius, both reaching 100k miles, are so far the most reliable vehicles we've owned.
2020 F250 STX CC SB 7.3L 10spd 3.55 4x4
2010 F250 XLT CC SB 5.4L 5spdTS 3.73
ex '95 Cummins,'98 12v Cummins,'01.5 Cummins,'03 Cummins; '05 Hemi
2017 Jayco 28RLS TT 32.5'

Grit_dog
Navigator
Navigator
Not too many turds in the punchbowl with trucks of the last 10-15 years.
6.0&6.4 Powerstrokes, hopped up Cummins killing 47/48 re transmissions, 01-03 duramnax injectors and ALL the 07-09 emissions on diesels are the Achilles heels, imo. Otherwise most every truck/SUV out there is decent or better in my book. Put miles on most of them personally.
Aside from the above, it's more about what /how you care for them. This subject is too subjective, lol. One idiot can run his rig into the ground with little maint and care and claim its the biggest pos ever. Another can baby it, wipe its butt with a soft cloth daily and claim it's the best because it's never let him down.
2016 Ram 2500, MotorOps.ca EFIlive tuned, 5โ€ turbo back, 6" lift on 37s
2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold

BB_TX
Nomad
Nomad
Ductape wrote:
SouthpawHD wrote:
Kinda sad that the best truck has ONLY 6% of them get 200k miles.

Even sadder for cars at around 2%.

Noting to be proud of.


Read again, that's not the case. Six percent of the vehicles on the road presently. There are many newer vehicles in the population just at lower mileage.

No, it does mean 6% of that particular model. Otherwise the numbers would not make sense. If you applied the percentages to ALL vehicles on the road and added the percentages then there be more vehicles on the road with over 200,000 miles than under.

Ductape
Explorer
Explorer
SouthpawHD wrote:
Kinda sad that the best truck has ONLY 6% of them get 200k miles.

Even sadder for cars at around 2%.

Noting to be proud of.


Read again, that's not the case. Six percent of the vehicles on the road presently. There are many newer vehicles in the population just at lower mileage.
49 States, 6 Provinces, 2 Territories...

eryoung
Explorer
Explorer
I'll say Ford (only because I have one LOL) I truly agree if you take good care of them (regular oil change, tune up, fluids flushed) all makes will last now a days.
2005 Black Ford F-350 XL Super Duty, PSD, DRW, 8ft bed,
Tow Boss, Tow Command, Snow plow prep, Line-X bed liner, Highway Products 5th wheel toolbox.

2005 Excel Limited 36RDE