How many miles can you get out of a 2000 dodge neon...
#1
#2
RE: How many miles can you get out of a 2000 dodge neon...
Personally, i think thats like trying to ask how much horsepower does a 400 C.C. engine make. Its not a question u can answer really. Different mods here and there change that.
How the car was broken in, how its been maintained, run at high rpms for extended periods of time will wear it down quick quick. Pretty much depends how you drive and maintain it.
jus my 2c
How the car was broken in, how its been maintained, run at high rpms for extended periods of time will wear it down quick quick. Pretty much depends how you drive and maintain it.
jus my 2c
#4
RE: How many miles can you get out of a 2000 dodge neon...
Peak power in the stock SOHC is closer to 5600 rpm. Even with the Mopar PCM, my car doesn't even start making decent power until 4000 rpm.
But driving at those rpms on the street is ridiculous. I keep mine in the 2k-3k range, unless I need to pass in a hurry or I'm getting on the freeway and want to get up to speed in a hurry.
With good maintenance, you should have no problems turning 250k miles. If I kept this engine, I'm sure it would hit 500k (236k now), but I plan on building one here soon to swap in...
Best of luck!
But driving at those rpms on the street is ridiculous. I keep mine in the 2k-3k range, unless I need to pass in a hurry or I'm getting on the freeway and want to get up to speed in a hurry.
With good maintenance, you should have no problems turning 250k miles. If I kept this engine, I'm sure it would hit 500k (236k now), but I plan on building one here soon to swap in...
Best of luck!
#6
RE: How many miles can you get out of a 2000 dodge neon...
Keep up with or ahead of the maintenance schedule in the owner's manual/FSM. Timing belt, water pump, and tensioner parts should be done before you get to the recommended 105k miles.
When you get a CEL, find out what it is and fix it.
You can't change the oil too often. A good synthetic goes a long ways, so does a quality filter.
Check your spark plugs every oil change and replace (as a group) as necessary. I normally do mine every other oil change, but that's probably overkill even at $1.00 per plug (Bosch coppers). Copper plugs are fine.
Replace the cooling system twice a year. Spend the extra on the premixed coolant. Don't ever put tap water (mineral deposits) or DI water (corrosion) in your car. Demineralized is fine, but I stick with the premix.
Avoid additives. Avoid gimmicks.
When the suspension goes, it's typically cheaper to upgrade than to replace with stock parts. Same goes for virtually every component on the car.
Spend the money on a lifetime alignment from Firestone ($160 or so). Use it a few times and it pays for itself. I've used it 9 times in less than 2 years. My 160 treadwear summer tires have lasted almost 37,000 miles now with 80% tread remaining because of proper alignment and frequent rotation/balancing (also lifetime - mounted at Wal-Mart for $40).
All-seasons are not. When you can afford it, get quality summer tires and quality snow tires on seperate (i.e. steelie) rims. I live in Albuqerque and still use snow tires every now and then.
When you get a CEL, find out what it is and fix it.
You can't change the oil too often. A good synthetic goes a long ways, so does a quality filter.
Check your spark plugs every oil change and replace (as a group) as necessary. I normally do mine every other oil change, but that's probably overkill even at $1.00 per plug (Bosch coppers). Copper plugs are fine.
Replace the cooling system twice a year. Spend the extra on the premixed coolant. Don't ever put tap water (mineral deposits) or DI water (corrosion) in your car. Demineralized is fine, but I stick with the premix.
Avoid additives. Avoid gimmicks.
When the suspension goes, it's typically cheaper to upgrade than to replace with stock parts. Same goes for virtually every component on the car.
Spend the money on a lifetime alignment from Firestone ($160 or so). Use it a few times and it pays for itself. I've used it 9 times in less than 2 years. My 160 treadwear summer tires have lasted almost 37,000 miles now with 80% tread remaining because of proper alignment and frequent rotation/balancing (also lifetime - mounted at Wal-Mart for $40).
All-seasons are not. When you can afford it, get quality summer tires and quality snow tires on seperate (i.e. steelie) rims. I live in Albuqerque and still use snow tires every now and then.
#7
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#8
#10
RE: How many miles can you get out of a 2000 dodge neon...
Keeping your car well maintained will get the most mileage out of it. I don't know how well these guys have kept their neons maintained, but I've heard of a couple that have broke 250K miles, and even one that has broken 500K on the original engine. It can be done, just don't drive like an ***.