QOTD: Willing Spirit, Weak Flesh?

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

Yesterday, the awe-inspiringly tall Matthew Guy asked about examples of daily drivers that achieved stratospheric odometer readings, which immediately catapulted this writer back to the middle of the previous decade — a better era for most things, save vehicle design.

Back then, your author’s beloved Camry Coupe was still running like a dream at 261,000 miles. Nary a drop of oil lost between changes. Repairs? Nonexistent. Bliss can truly exist outside of heaven. It was a happy coincidence that Guy’s post occured on the same morning that Murilee showed us an indestructible five-cylinder Benz diesel; truly a paragon of longevity.

Yet for every high-mileage champion, there’s a vehicle that gives up well before its time — wheezing to a stop before the finish line is in sight. Perhaps you’ve owned one?

We all hope and pray that our current ride goes the distance but, like your childhood vision of owning an ice cream factory, such dreams are often unrealistic. While I had hoped that my previous vehicle would soldier on well past its paid-off date, that was not to be. With coolant consumption reaching alarming levels, I hastily traded in Cruze 1.0 in order to recoup any measure of my initial investment. Blame might lie on a full-loss wintertime coolant dump that occured years earlier, and for an unknown period of time. There was a cold snap, a hose came loose following a dodgy repair, it’s a long story.

So, off it went to the auction at 129,000 miles. Not happy, this owner was. Now, before you place the blame solely on the decision to purchase a GM throwaway, the previous three low-rent GM sedans I’d owned were still running fine at 150,000+ miles. (Fingers crossed on Round Five…)

Despite its name being a stand-in for cheap reliability, my sister’s long-gone 2003 Honda Civic developed fatal engine and transmission issues at a ridiculously (for the model) low miles. It was a 1.7-liter/five-speed combo, if you’re curious. I don’t think the Civic made it to 125k before she ditched it in favor of something that wasn’t a grenade-in-waiting.

When a looming repair (or repairs) stand to cost the owner more than the car is worth, dropping the thing like a hot potato is the only acceptable course of action.

Comb those memory banks, B&B. We’ve talked indestructible hand-me-downs, now let’s talk turds. Did one of your vehicles give up the ghost long before its supposed best-before date? What was the odometer reading?

[Images: Chrysler, Honda]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • Dividebytube Dividebytube on Dec 18, 2019

    My dad's 1984 (?) Oldsmobile 98 with the ill-fated diesel engine. It was a beautiful car with white leather, factory CB radio, power everything, and... slow as molasses. Diesel engine went at ~60k miles of mostly highway use. My dad had a gas engine put in - and the transmission promptly fragged while I was driving it to a job interview. After that experience he went right to the Nissan dealership and bought a Stanza. A drop down in size and Brougham-ness but the reliability difference - woah! Me? I've owned a few used cars that were cheap and overly abused so I won't begrudge them too much. The Taurus wagon with the slipping transmission, the Saturn SL that burned oil like a sieve, the Volvo 850 with the ticking rockers, the Honda Accord coupe with the slipping transmission. Argh!

  • Formula m Formula m on Dec 18, 2019

    A Honda Civic your sister felt she needed to get rid of at 125,000 miles or = 200,000kms ??? That's about when a vehicle gets expensive to replace the many wear items or rust kills it in Canada My parents bought a new 2001 Pontiac Montana sport when I left for college. I came home 2 years later it had 68,000kms (42,000 miles) It had been pressure tested many times for water leaks under warranty with no fix. The interior was a rattle trap from the cottage roads. The leaking head gasket at 42,000mi was enough to trade it on a Nissan Maxima. Other than used 4x4 trucks no one in the Family bought another GM product. I even worked for GM during college co-op in 2004-2005 and in Sales for GM from 2007-2009 until the bankruptcy

  • MaintenanceCosts It's not a Benz or a Jag / it's a 5-0 with a rag /And I don't wanna brag / but I could never be stag
  • 3-On-The-Tree Son has a 2016 Mustang GT 5.0 and I have a 2009 C6 Corvette LS3 6spd. And on paper they are pretty close.
  • 3-On-The-Tree Same as the Land Cruiser, emissions. I have a 1985 FJ60 Land Cruiser and it’s a beast off-roading.
  • CanadaCraig I would like for this anniversary special to be a bare-bones Plain-Jane model offered in Dynasty Green and Vintage Burgundy.
  • ToolGuy Ford is good at drifting all right... 😉
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