As long as you keep up with the maintenance, depending on manufacturer, it should last well over 200 thousand miles. I've seen Asian imports (Toyota's and Honda's mainly) with up to and including 500 thousand miles with the original engine and transmission.
Regular maintenance includes and is not limited to, Fluid and Filter changes, Transmission flushes, Transmission pan gaskets(if leaking) and regular checkups.
It depends on the minivan.
Impossible to say. If it was totally rebuilt and done correctly, with proper service it should last as long as a new one. If it is a used transmission, who knows.
If you keep up with your regular maintenance, you should not have a problem with the transmission of your BMW car. If something still happens to it, your warranty should cover it.
It can last as long as a new one. 100,000 to 200,000 milesIt can last as long as a new one. 100,000 to 200,000 miles
There is no way to know how long it will take for the transmission on a Mercedes Benz CVT to fail.
There is no way to tell how long it will last. If you change the transmission fluid every 75,000 miles which is what I recommend, and do not pull any load, it can last as long as the engine will last. It may also fail with less than 100,000 miles on the odometer. No way to predict how long it will last.
Antarctica should last as long as the earth lasts.
Should last about 30 minutez
150,000 miles is about average.
It should last five to six minutes.
Sorry, I do not have an answer for you, but I am having the same problem with my 2009 Chrysler Town and Country. 24,000 and I need new brakes. What a joke. This will be the last car I buy from Chrylser.
it just works until it stops! like any machine! :)