How many miles ya got

Arborist Forum

Help Support Arborist Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Alternator has been replaced 3 times, driveshaft twice, waterpump once, it uses about 2 quarts of oil every 8,000 miles.
My Goldwing came with a 3 year unlimited miles warranty and for $300 I was able to buy 4 more years of unlimited miles warranty so in my case the bike was under warranty for 286,000 miles, Honda has always taken very good care of me.

I know of at least two other owners that are over 500,000 miles, one of them is 76 years young and when he reached 540,000 on his 02 he bought a brandnew 2015 and put 200,000 miles on it in 24 months !

There's a guy about 50 miles from me (Wausau wi) that turned 1,000,000 miles on his 1975 Goldwing about a month ago.
 
I usually don't plug in a anything till its -10 or colder. Have maybe 40 diesels between trucks and equipment. (I'm not counting!)

The only gas rig I have, a C30 dumptruck has never not started, even at -35* (about as cold as it usually gets here)
Even though the diesels will start at that low a temp, it's always advantageous to plug them in if possible when it's below 45 degrees IMHO.

The warmer that oil, the thinner it is, and the quicker it'll get up in the motor, which means less wear in the long run. Relatively, most engine wear occurs on cold starts. Also, when they're plugged in, I notice the manual trans shift better when you initially drive, whereas the cold fluid gives you a bit of a fit sometimes going into gear. I think some of the heat from the block finds its way over to the tranny and actually warms that up a bit too.

Also, the more gradual the temp increase is, and the more gradual the temp decrease is, helps as well. Little stuff like that goes along way in my mind. Of course it can't always be for, but when feasible, I try to do it, and have yet to have a problem with any of my motors.
 
I know of at least two other owners that are over 500,000 miles, one of them is 76 years young and when he reached 540,000 on his 02 he bought a brandnew 2015 and put 200,000 miles on it in 24 months !

There's a guy about 50 miles from me (Wausau wi) that turned 1,000,000 miles on his 1975 Goldwing about a month ago.

Amazing.
 
Even though the diesels will start at that low a temp, it's always advantageous to plug them in if possible when it's below 45 degrees IMHO.

The warmer that oil, the thinner it is, and the quicker it'll get up in the motor, which means less wear in the long run. Relatively, most engine wear occurs on cold starts. Also, when they're plugged in, I notice the manual trans shift better when you initially drive, whereas the cold fluid gives you a bit of a fit sometimes going into gear. I think some of the heat from the block finds its way over to the tranny and actually warms that up a bit too.

Also, the more gradual the temp increase is, and the more gradual the temp decrease is, helps as well. Little stuff like that goes along way in my mind. Of course it can't always be for, but when feasible, I try to do it, and have yet to have a problem with any of my motors.

It's 45 or colder 9 months a year. 52* right now.

No issues here either, some of the equipment has almost 30,000hrs.
 
We lived in Helena, MT. from 1981 to 1984.

I think it was the winter of 82 that it got down to 45 below at night w/o any wind. During the day, it "warmed up" to a toasty 20-25 below zero. That weather lasted about a week or so.

Even the hardiest of Montanans found that to be very challenging.
 
And to think we have a few trucks that don't like to start at 32...

Sent from my SM-G900T using Tapatalk

Don't have much trouble here till its around -10* or colder.

The Big Cam in my International is cold blooded, but has an ether start setup (button in the dash). Plugging it in for 2-3 hrs though and it starts like it's 70*.

The 7.3idis are a bit fussy. One has about 300 (hard miles too), the other about 55k, but it needs glowplugs.

My TDI Jetta, the battery won't turn the engine over much below -15*. It starts fine with a jump pack though. Thought it was a worn battery, but a brand new one does it too.

Generally no issues with the logging equipment. A mix of John Deere, Cummins, Isuzu, and Whatever engine Komatsu uses (I forget). We do keep a salamander heater in the service truck to warm stuff up if needed.
One of the skidders is pretty tired (high hours... low compression) and usually takes a spray of ether.
The 750 dozer sometimes too. The 450 dozervand 648D skidder start like it's 70* whether it is or its -40*.

I won't argue that block heaters are nice, but it'd break the bank to keep stuff plugged in. Figure just 10 heaters going for 14 hrs a day works to about $800/month in electricity.

We plug the cranky starters in when needed, that's about it.

My skid steer would need a block heater. Last winter it wouldn't start at -30*. Had to stick a salamander heater on it.


Camped out once in my TDI Jetta, was -45*. I froze my ass off, just idling it wasn't enough load to make enough heat!
 
Ptk0Twb.jpg
Ptk0Twb.jpg)
a>
Ptk0Twb.jpg
[/IMG]
car2_zpsaod1zcrd.jpg.html
car2_zpsaod1zcrd.jpg.html
car2_zpsaod1zcrd.jpg.html
car2_zpsaod1zcrd.jpg
4pSeI
2003 Tahoe-226,000 miles.
Gene
car2_zpsaod1zcrd.jpg
car2_zpsaod1zcrd.jpg.html
 
Alternator has been replaced 3 times, driveshaft twice, waterpump once, it uses about 2 quarts of oil every 8,000 miles.
My Goldwing came with a 3 year unlimited miles warranty and for $300 I was able to buy 4 more years of unlimited miles warranty so in my case the bike was under warranty for 286,000 miles, Honda has always taken very good care of me.

I know of at least two other owners that are over 500,000 miles, one of them is 76 years young and when he reached 540,000 on his 02 he bought a brandnew 2015 and put 200,000 miles on it in 24 months !

There's a guy about 50 miles from me (Wausau wi) that turned 1,000,000 miles on his 1975 Goldwing about a month ago.

How do they get an odometer to show 1 million miles when it only shows up to 99,999 miles and 1/10th of a mile?
Thanski
 
How do they get an odometer to show 1 million miles when it only shows up to 99,999 miles and 1/10th of a mile?
Thanski
Well if your referring to the million mile 1975 wing the guy has kept very meticulous records and they were on display at the open house for anyone to see, there is no doubt in my mind that he actually rode that wing one million miles ! I believe The odometer on my 02 wing could only go to 999,999.9 miles, I suppose after that point it would start over at zero, right now I don’t plan on ever swapping engines so I highly doubt it will ever reach one million miles, right now it only has 508,000
 
Well if your referring to the million mile 1975 wing the guy has kept very meticulous records and they were on display at the open house for anyone to see, there is no doubt in my mind that he actually rode that wing one million miles ! I believe The odometer on my 02 wing could only go to 999,999.9 miles, I suppose after that point it would start over at zero, right now I don’t plan on ever swapping engines so I highly doubt it will ever reach one million miles, right now it only has 508,000
It just seems strange to me to be claiming all those miles when the numberplate is the only thing that's done the miles, I want to know how far something can travel without being rebuilt because that's the test of quality & longevity.
Thanski
 
Just rolled 497000 on my 2005 Jetta TDI. No major repairs, leaky hose, fuel pump, wear and tear items like tires, brakes mostly.
a4a74ab735b6223d32e61e6bea79c6f4.jpg


Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G920A using Tapatalk
 
It just seems strange to me to be claiming all those miles when the numberplate is the only thing that's done the miles, I want to know how far something can travel without being rebuilt because that's the test of quality & longevity.
Thanski
96 5.7 small block vortex in a Chevy Silverado 4 by 4, 300 k without any engine work what so ever, tune ups and oil changes as needed. Never had the valve covers off still doesn’t use oil. That’s the best I’ve ever had, by a long shot. It’s still going strong!
 
1967 Volvo Break with the back cut off to make a pick up truck 687,873Kms=515,000 ish miles 1 decoke & set of piston rings + hard seats for unleaded fuel & 250.000ish.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top