You will have better luck more then likely with a car that has less miles. But it also depends on the currant owner. Do they seem like people that take car of their belongings. It will not matter on miles if the previous owner doesn't know how to give the car a simple oil change
2006-10-09 08:21:35
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answer #1
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answered by cargrl 3
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Milage is not very important in todays engines. If the vehicle has been maintained and the drive train is in good shape, it will last for ever. The big thing to look for is the timming belt, (all engines need this changed every 60k to 90k miles) also a sign of good maintnace is no oil leaks, a clean motor, good tires, paper work to prove it was done. Some vehciles, like Honda, Toyota and Nisan have great rep. for high milage vehicles. Good Luck
2006-10-09 07:25:56
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Drivers around my area, outside of San Francisco, will easily rack up 100,000+ miles in under 4 years. Vehicles only a few years old, were put together under better quality control than a vehicle built in the late 80s and early 90s.
Have a good mechanic, especially someone with experience with the brand you are interested in, look over the car. There quirks that are specific to makes and models, and it is easier to have them identified by someone who have had experience repair such issues.
2006-10-09 07:29:51
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answer #3
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answered by terrylondon00 2
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Some cars are crap at 50k, some are good up until 300k. It depends on the vehicle and how well it was maintained by previos owners. Unfortunately, Japanese vehicles are more likely to run well with higher miles, but American cars like Fords and Chevy's last a long time and parts are cheap to fix things. I wouldn't suggest any type of Dodge or Chrysler with high miles, they are junk.
2006-10-09 07:22:24
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answer #4
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answered by Emjay 3
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Im uncertain i could provide $6000 for any vehicle with 140k. considered one of those vehicle would want high priced upkeep interior the close to destiny. Or it may pass years and not making use of a concern. those are the probabilities one takes while procuring an particularly used vehicle. playstation , 6 years in the past, i offered a vehicle with fifty 9,000 miles for $1815. Im nonetheless using it in the present day.
2016-10-16 00:21:54
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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Unless it has seen a lot of service and revamped in parts- no. Cars wear out and become uneconomical after the milage reaches that high. There are tons of parts that can start going out of wack that may end up costing you more than you are prepared to invest in an older car.
2006-10-09 07:26:40
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answer #6
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answered by trigunmarksman 6
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milage doesn't mean as much as it used to... i drive a ford truck and i work a salvage yard so even though my truck has low milage i've gorren it stuck and drug plenty of cars even though the odometer says 23,000 miles believe me this truck is beat clean to hell and back...what i'm getting at is it actually depends on how well maintained it has been. 400,000 miles is not unheard of anymore. if you like the car and it checks out ok then buy it.
2006-10-09 07:36:20
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Depends on the car. I bought a Geo Prizm with 120,000 miles and put another 110,000 on it. I've currently got a '97 Pontiac with 224,000 miles on it.
2006-10-09 07:22:13
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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Physically--in good condition, does owner have records of maintenance? test drive it. Have a 94 Jeep with 180,000...few minor maintenance issues..but runs like a champ.
2006-10-09 07:16:20
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answer #9
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answered by JD 2
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15,000 miles per year is the new average yearly mileage i sold my car last year that's how i found that out but i say the best is 12,000 a year or under
2006-10-09 07:24:17
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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