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Because he's not on the original engine, he won't be getting jack from Honda. It just shows that "MOST" of the body has lasted this long.

The million mile Joe got a new car because supposedly, his Accord was still all original, from what I remember.

Delta should crack 1 million, watch the numbers roll over to ZERO, give the car a good detail and take it in to Honda for a trade as a super ridiculously low mileage Civic and get top dollar for it. :rotfl:
It won't roll over, it will sit at all 9's :giggle:
 
They dont give these people new cars because they are representing the company's quality, rather they dont want others realizing that cars can go that long. Read up on it..
Links to your claims? I think you're full of crap. My dad had an 88 Accord with 550k miles on the original block, second transmission and there was a local Honda Dealership in Atlanta that was very interested in the car. It still looked very new on the outside (garage kept), though the interior didn't look good (tears, stains and cigarette smoke smell). He kept up on regular maintenance and ran 10w-30 oil that was changed every 3-4k miles.

They were not going to straight up give him a new car, but they offered triple the trade if he bought from that dealership. It's a great marketing tool for the dealership. Put a car in the showroom with 550k miles. Give the potential customer the idea the car will make it that far with regular maintence even though 1) the customer will most likely not drive it that much and 2) realistically the car probably won't make it that far on the original block. Still gives the customer the satisfaction that they are buying a product for life whether they plan to keep it for life or not.
 
Hi deltatechx,

I've gone through this thread and am wondering what is your current brakes set up? Since having warping trouble with the EBC rotors and EBC Greenstuff pads did you change for Brembo blank rotors and OE pads? If so did that get rid of the problem or did it just reoccur shortly after? Would changing to Redstuff pads do the trick? I think they can handle more heat but are more noisy?

Do you use a torque wrench on your wheel lug nuts?

I started having this kind of trouble when braking at lower speeds the day after I brought my car to the dealer for oil change and maybe tire rotation can't remember.

From what I read people are saying that pad material is building up on the rotors because of overheating due to driving style and that makes the rotors uneven and that is what we feel are warped rotors. Now in order prevent this without changing the driver can I get thicker rotors (so they can handle more friction without overheating) maybe that would require different calipers then the OE and maybe different wheels for clearance? Or would that just mess up the balance of the whole car / require mod of master cylinder etc?

I have a 2006 Civic LX and I live in Canada so I need the brakes to perform cold, I drive mainly in the city. People say I'm a spirited driver but I don't race or anything.

Thanks to anyone for info on this.
 
Discussion starter · #1,558 ·
It passed 900,000 miles today :thumb:
Current engine is at 550,000 miles with zero maintenance done other than irregular oil changes, lol. I've been really rough with this engine and it hasn't given me any problems yet.

For brakes, I've been using oem rotors with Wagner ThermoQuiet pads and shoes. I've been very happy with them.


 
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