Spotting a high mileage hero ahead of time...
Spotting a high mileage hero ahead of time...
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Prisoner 24601

Original Poster:

650 posts

73 months

Hi Gents - can you spot a high mileage hero ahead of time? I am not a petrol head and am not fussed with cars generally. If I set out to find a car at circa 100k miles and intend to drive it daily (approx. 9,000 miles a year), to 200k miles with normal servicing and reasonable maintenance/replacement costs - what would you look for?

We are a regular family of 5 - we currently have a 7 seater, but could possibly reduce down to 5 seats.

Volvo V70? Skoda Superb/Octavia? Honda something?

How does one go about finding and predicting a car has a very high chance of being reliable and low hassle?

I believe I would want it to be a simple as possible, no ad blu, no catalytic converter, no extraneous stupid systems layered over the top of the engine (EU emissions systems etc). Possibly 2014 - 2017?

v8notbrave

309 posts

38 months

My answer is always 520d will eat the family miles in comfort. Mines on 150k and feels brand new

They had several egr recalls so that's one maintenance item not needed. On top of that the engine super solid and they're cheap second hand and actually nimble for its size in the twisty bits

Getting a car without a cat means early 90s I think? All cars have various euro engine systems. Petrol is simpler for some and 9k a year you're maybe in the threshold of petrol Vs diesel but diesel certainly more durable to 200k

itcaptainslow

4,575 posts

161 months

If you want no catalyst you’re buying pre 1992…

Prisoner 24601

Original Poster:

650 posts

73 months

Thanks you for the quick responses. Look, i probably shouldn't have made reference to Cat Converter in my message, i do not want that to detract from the overall point and request. Forget i said that. But 100%, i do not want Ad Blu - that is non negotiable.

Prisoner 24601

Original Poster:

650 posts

73 months

I think 'Scottish Car Clan' has done a few v good videos on this, for those that use YouTube. I will revisit them.

Still looking for good input on this topic if you have a view.

Thank you to V8 above - perfect example of a really good response.

plfrench

4,496 posts

293 months

Skoda Enyaq like this one?

21 plate on 127k miles for under £10k. Could be a very cost effective way of piling on the miles.

https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-details/202510237...


hungry_hog

2,822 posts

213 months

v8notbrave said:
My answer is always 520d will eat the family miles in comfort. Mines on 150k and feels brand new

They had several egr recalls so that's one maintenance item not needed. On top of that the engine super solid and they're cheap second hand and actually nimble for its size in the twisty bits

Getting a car without a cat means early 90s I think? All cars have various euro engine systems. Petrol is simpler for some and 9k a year you're maybe in the threshold of petrol Vs diesel but diesel certainly more durable to 200k
I have a G31 as well
Mine is a 2018 on 70k and feels new, the BMW dealer even remarked on how little needed doing (no upsell on jobs at all).

I think the previous model (F10/F11) has also held up v well.

J4CKO

46,197 posts

225 months

Tesla Model 3 ?

itcaptainslow

4,575 posts

161 months

Another way is to look at what the local taxi drivers use. Seems a Corolla Hybrid is extremely long lived!

7 5 7

4,254 posts

136 months

Most cars if regulary serviced will do good miles. My family car is a 318d E91 2012 - just past it's MOT this week with nearly 180,000 miles on the clock.

The other work hack I use daily, probably is getting to survivor status, a 2008 Vectra petrol with nearly 190,000 miles on it, both run and are in daily use.

Most people get bored or don't service cars correctly, so many never make it past 100k then say their cars were unreliable biggrin

https://vehiclescore.co.uk/ - has a good meter on when cars searched for are scrapped or lifespan, not sure how accurate but they say it's reviewed constantly.

Edited by 7 5 7 on Sunday 17th May 10:38

Prisoner 24601

Original Poster:

650 posts

73 months

v8notbrave said:
My answer is always 520d will eat the family miles in comfort. Mines on 150k and feels brand new

They had several egr recalls so that's one maintenance item not needed. On top of that the engine super solid and they're cheap second hand and actually nimble for its size in the twisty bits

Getting a car without a cat means early 90s I think? All cars have various euro engine systems. Petrol is simpler for some and 9k a year you're maybe in the threshold of petrol Vs diesel but diesel certainly more durable to 200k
Something like this for instance?

https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-details/202603090...

Doesitdrive

1,143 posts

6 months

v8notbrave said:
My answer is always 520d will eat the family miles in comfort. Mines on 150k and feels brand new

They had several egr recalls so that's one maintenance item not needed. On top of that the engine super solid and they're cheap second hand and actually nimble for its size in the twisty bits

Getting a car without a cat means early 90s I think? All cars have various euro engine systems. Petrol is simpler for some and 9k a year you're maybe in the threshold of petrol Vs diesel but diesel certainly more durable to 200k
Well known for timing chain issues though, and that is a gearbox or Engine out job if not snapped and a lot more if it is.

7 5 7

4,254 posts

136 months

Doesitdrive said:
Well known for timing chain issues though, and that is a gearbox or Engine out job if not snapped and a lot more if it is.
Yup, as much as I have a high mileage N47 and it holds up great, I wouldn't buy a high mileage unknown one, I've known my car since it had 50k on.

I also wouldn't choose a diesel either these days for such a thing, petrols can do the miles just as well, with less headaches usually too.

okv3

3,152 posts

221 months

In my experience, anything Japanese. Make sure it's rustproofed, service it once a year, you'll be fine.

I was always a staunch buyer of older, mostly English built tat in my youth, but have been in Japanese daily drivers for the last 8 1/2 years with zero issues and wouldn't look anywhere else for something that I rely on each and every day when something else is usually broken (or more accurately, I have broken hehe)

georgeyboy12345

4,409 posts

60 months

On autotrader or PH, do a search for cars with over 200k and see what comes up. This lets you know which makes and models are 200k-capable.

Smint

3,077 posts

60 months

Almost every private hire car you see is a Toyota hybrid, its not cos they're fashionable.

Corolla hybrid estate, or cheaper cos older Auris hybrid estate, bigger and not quite so good on fuel through hardly a drinker Avensis 1.8 petrol (because you've already ruled out the 2 litre Diesel because DPF). Maybe rare to find one which hasn't been taxied Prius + is bigger. Normal Prius might be compromised re luggage space.
Suzuki Swace is a Corolla hybrid estate but with Suzi badges and a different grille.

Only fly in the ointment is Corolla/Avensis have electric parking brake, suggest keep that well serviced and looked after because when they fail like all EPBs its an expensive fix.
Toyota hybrids usually good for 300k, many seeing 400k+ before serious issues develop.
If worried about hybrid battery costs there's a company in Northampton who specialises in reconditioning hybrid batteries on a menu pricing/warranty period basis.

rossub

5,678 posts

215 months

Prisoner 24601 said:
I am not a petrol head and am not fussed with cars generally.
How on earth did you end up on here confused

SuperPav

1,300 posts

150 months

Either a Toyota with 1.8 hybrid system (Prius or Auris or Corolla or Lexus CT)

Or a Passat or A4/6 2.0 diesel. Arguably a bit more complex but a lot of them run around with 200k+ miles both here and on the continent.

Or a Tesla. Avoid large rear drive unit Model S and X, and it’s a bit of a gamble with some gremlins but again, a lot of them running around with moon miles.


Milkyway

12,734 posts

78 months

itcaptainslow said:
If you want no catalyst you re buying pre 1992
Ford Granada.

_Rodders_

2,189 posts

44 months

itcaptainslow said:
If you want no catalyst you re buying pre 1992
Or an EV.

The answer is a Long Range Model 3. Could probably get away without even changing the brake pads upto 200000 miles if you drive relatively gently.