We have a Camry and a Tacoma and will stick with them.
Some of those “Japanese” cars are made by Americans in these United States.
I had a Toyota 4Runner and only had a starter failure before I traded it in with 240,000 miles on it.
A lot of automotive reviews stress that many Toyota models and some Hondas will run 300 k no problem and no big costs. Not so foe EU and most American cars.
If the Ford: F-150 is on the list then this entire write up is a sham! Back in the day you couldn’t beat Buick. Things have changed.
Competing with Boeing.
When I was a kid we were told everything made in Japan was crap.
No surprise here. I can vouch for Toyota. Good stuff.
Sure am glad all I have are Toyotas and a Honda!
All cars can get 200,000 if taken care of.
2016 Ford Fusion - S
301,000 miles as of today...
I have a 12 year old Chevy Sonic with the 1.4 litre turbo option. 188k miles and still going strong, just recently had to replace the clutch, but that’s it. Most cars I’ve had I get at least 200k miles. Just have to take care of them.
I am not surprised at how many Toyotas are on the list.
It was my view long ago that Toyota had become an auto engineering company that sells cars, while most American auto companies had become marketing companies that sell cars.
Now the entire industry is being slowly taken over, parasitically by the technology industry and will one day be no more than subsidiaries of them (the parasite is the technolgy and when it matures - it will takeover the host).
Already the technology is driving the auto industry to its theme and agenda - collecting user data to sell it to the technology indstry and its reveune stream - ads. Fors just announced its onboard computers can now record what is being said inside the car, and can send that to “Ford” so ford can get paid for directing ads to you based on what it heard in your car.
My current Toyota Sienna is a 310,000 miles and going strong - even with 20,000 miles pulling a 10 foot box trailer. My last one made it to 283,500 when I sold it. A mechanic bought it and did some work on it and sold it to someone nearby. I saw it every few months for at least 3 years after I sold it.
I like cars made by non-union American workers. I wish cars made by unionized Americans workers lasted as long....
No Chrysler/Stellantis/Jeeps on that list.
Ain’t surprised.
I had a CR-V that got 201K miles before I traded it in for a newer one. The only thing it needed was an alternator. I regretted trading it in and wish I had kept it as a backup. The new CR-V just passed 100K and has been problem free.
As someone who owned and drove a Honda Civic for 9 years, I can say that the car was so boring, sluggish and numb to drive that it only *felt* like I had it for 200K miles.
There was a time when the Toyota Tundra would be on this list.
There are 10 and 20 year old Tundras that are still running strong.
But something went drastically wrong with Toyota. They are replacing over 100,000 engines in 2022-2023 models.
We have a Ford F-150, 2021. I love it. Beau’s F-350 has 200K on it, and while it has needed some repairs, it’s mostly been WELDING, as this IS Wisconsin and things tend to rust out up here. ;)
My ‘summer car’ is a 2001 VW Golf with 60K miles on her. I love her, too! Yes, she’s really 25 years old! A few dents and scratches and one hood ‘ding’ from hitting a deer, but I saw him stick the landing and run off. ;)