As of 11/2007 it was 2.6 million miles on a 1966 Volvo P1800 all by it's original owner, Irv Gordon.
No one answer. It depends on the fuel mileage for THAT car, and how many miles it is driven.
You can find your car's gas mileage by taking the number of miles driven and dividing it by the gallons of gas used. Most new cars today will digitally display your miles per gallon.
one bfore it breaks
Take the car you drive, miles you drive per year, mileage of the vehicle divided into total miles will give you gallons used.6,000 miles driven by a car getting 30 mpg means it used 200 gallons.
Variable life cycle means that the life of a product is affected by the use of the product. A car, for example, that is driven over 500 miles per day every day, will have a shorter life than one driven a few miles each day.
According to the National Automobile Dealers Association, the mean age of cars in 2001 was 8.4 years, which means that the average car would be scrapped at twice that age of 16.8 years. According to the US Department of Transportatiion, Federal Highway Administration, in 2003, the average annual miles driven for all age groups was 13,476 miles per year. So assuming a ratio of one car per driver, we get 13476 miles per year X 16.8 years = 226,397 total miles. Answer: just over 225,000 miles
It all depends on how fast a person was driving. If one was going sixty-five miles per hour, one could drive 780 miles in about 12 hours, or 1560 miles for a full day of 24 hours. If one was traveling thirty-five miles per hour, he would have driven 420 miles in 12 hours.
Cost = $ 25.00 + (Miles driven * $ 0.35) So there is your answer!
It varies, depending on driving habits, conditions, maintenance, and how frequently the car is driven. You can drive one off the lot and if you drive it hard without breaking it in it won't last 10,000 miles. If the car is well maintained, driven easily, not modified, and not left to sit for long enough to dry out the seals, the engine may last as long as 200,000 miles.
The US Department of Transportation reported that a typical car is on the road for about 12 years or 128,500 miles. However, there are cars that can last almost indefinitely- one man, Irv Gordon, has driven his Volvo for 2.6 million miles, all with the original engine and turbocharger.
Simple, you don't. Rubberbands are too fragile for the strain of a usually chain or belt driven car (yes even if you use more than one).
Assuming that one is referring to a front wheel alignment, there are a number of signs that can indicate that this process is required. If the car has driven over 100,000 miles since the last alignment, the front tires are wearing unevenly, the front of the car shakes when driving on a smooth surface, or the car is pulling to one side, a front wheel alignment is probably needed.