No fanfare for this one, but the truck crossed the 150,000 mile mark on Saturday......
Yeah and you've had to put a lot more work in yours to get there! Something like 75,000 just to keep driving a truck! You should buy a new one at that rate and give your old one to a friend who cares!:sombrero:01Tundra said:Dang....you're 53,000 miles ahead of me !!!!!
Goal? 200,000? 250,000? 300,000? I don't know what the mileage potential is, but I'd like to find out. I tend to keep vehicles as long as the don't harsh my mellow. If it's fairly easy to work on, I can do all the mechanicals as they wear out, so potentially I could keep it until it rots away to dust.....however, we just ditched my wifes Impala (148,xxx miles) because it developed some extremely discomforting electrical demons that I absolutely could not trace. snip..........
Good, keep driving that thing!
I would like to know someone with 250,000+ miles on their 4.7L with it still running strong. As the (s)miles accumulate on the Distance Runner, I'm more concerned about the rest of the chassis holding up than the engine (after 200K).
Goal? 200,000? 250,000? 300,000? I don't know what the mileage potential is, but I'd like to find out. I tend to keep vehicles as long as the don't harsh my mellow. If it's fairly easy to work on, I can do all the mechanicals as they wear out, so potentially I could keep it until it rots away to dust.....however, we just ditched my wifes Impala (148,xxx miles) because it developed some extremely discomforting electrical demons that I absolutely could not trace.
Drive her until you've both had enough of each other.
My 2000 Tundra (pictured below) had around 180k at the time of that picture and almost 200k when I finally traded it in '08 for a new Tacoma DC.
I was pretty attached to that rig and it was still in great overall condition when I let her go. With my daughter getting older we felt we needed a true
4-door.
It proved to be a bittersweet, but good choice in the end.:costumed-smiley-007
WS63
I think the chassis will be just fine....I'm guessing (at least with the winters in the East, and the visits to the beach) that the body will begin to rot before anything else wants to quit.
Question on the transmission skid, I definitely want to do something to protect it, but it seems like the Skidrow plate is skinnier than it should/could be. Any insight?