Westernwannabe
FNG
- Joined
- Apr 6, 2024
- Messages
- 35
Depends on gas vs diesel as well. 250-300k is nothing engine wise for a maintained diesel where most gas engines will need a rebuild by then. The truck is another question with that many miles on the drivetrain and everything else.
Definitely!One thing I have noticed in the older vs new argument is that 100K miles was once the line in the sand for a truck to be towards the end of its useful life. Now it seems to be about 200K. I cannot wrap my head around the prices on trucks that have 150K miles or more on the odometer! Many people now talk about a 100K mile truck as having LOW miles. That says something about the reliability of newer trucks compared to older trucks.
I have only bought used trucks, all purchased with 80-115k miles. So I don’t know the previous maintenance/abuse. The first two were GMC Sierras and both made it to right around 200k miles before needing engine work so I got rid of them. Both had horrible rust issues. I will say that those engines just keep going with “issues” if you keep adding oil and changing spark plugs.
The 3rd was a Tundra with 115k miles from a framer that raised cattle in the SW WI hills. I got a crazy good price on it and knew he hauled cattle and a framing trailer with it. I expected to put a transmission or engine in it and accepted that with the price. Made it to 240k miles without either. Started having issues at that point but honestly could have kept going.
4th I just bought a newer Tundra w/92k miles and great service records, not a blemish on it. Really planning to take this one to 300k+