200,000 Mile Club |
Seattle. From fisherman Nick. I think the first car on this list is an '85 Accord, not a '65 Accord. Don't think they made Accords in '65.
If the interior and the body of your car are in good shape. It probably makes more sense to get it repaired, even if repairs are expensive, than to get a newer one. My old Dodge Dakota needed a transmission and it could have stood a little body work, but getting it fixed would still have been a lot cheaper than buying the 2015 Colorado. And I would still have a manual control for the transfer case, not the stupid dial on the dashboard. And I wouldn't have the horrible whining sound I've got now. Probably going to have to get a new transfer case to get rid of it.
2 comments:
My 1989 Toyota SR5 Pickup has over 207,000 miles. Just installed a new ignition switch. Still has the clutch and freon that was installed at the factory.
You said you made a mistake not fixing the old trunk but buying the new truck, now you're going to do the same with the new truck?
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