10,000 miles in 3 days = 138 miles an hour OR 4 days = 104 miles an hour. . the only way this is possible is putting the car in a custom "running" machine with wheels suspended and driving 138 miles an hour non stop using the machine just to break world record purpose
There’s a video of a guy that drove his 2017 Civic with manual transmission for over 700,000 miles, and he says hes going to try to hit the 1 million mile mark! The civics are very reliable vehicles, and I wouldn’t doubt this red civic would cross 1 million some day🤷♂️
I can see this happening. I own a 2013 ford escape se and when I bought it it had 37,158 miles on it and i got my driver's license on 10/16/2018 and got my escape on 10/20/2018 and exactly 1 year later it had 139,547 miles on it. I drove everywhere but that's a given when you get your driver's license.
@@peakseamus nothing to do with weight or size, the seats are just not designed for ergonomics. Even the skinniest person can't overcome a lack of ergonomic design, cause Honda has a price point to hit. Cuz it's a Civic, not a high-end Acura. So long distance driving with Civic seats eventually feels like using a wooden kitchen chair with some padding as your office chair - doable but not preferred and it hurts after a while.
I’m just at 47k miles after bought 2 year ago with 32k miles I might working 28 miles to 36 miles away 6 days a week then I do a lot of city driving too.
I bought my new Honda Civic EX on Feb 1 and today is Feb 22 and I am still on my dealer provided first tank of gas! Just been commenting and running normal errands.
Had to be in shuttle service with two or more round trips per day, maybe even round-the-clock, and more than one driver. My guess is moving organs and tissues for transplant surgery.
My 2004 Acura MDX had 350,000 miles on it in 2017 when I got a new SUV and sold it to my sister...who still has it and now maybe has 390,000 miles on it .. she drives much less than I do. Doing 30,000 miles per year and holding a full time office job is very easy to do.
Honestly it’s probably equivalent to even less. They say 10%. So let’s say for argument sake 90% of the 248k was highway and 10% city it would make it equivalent to roughly 47k
Got an old civic si when I was in highschool had 89000 sold it to my buddy with 185000 or so he drove it while in college funny enough saw him the other day at a gas station in that exact car the thing had 352000 great cars got to love Honda for that even if they ain’t your style
I got 2019 accord 1.5 sport finally hit 47k miles after 2 year owning it I got it when it only 32k miles this is mostly city driving but I’ve drove bit further couple time now but if I get a job is 36. Miles away and working 6 day a week I probably hit 60k miles easily and keep going.
There’s no way. This car must have been put up on blocks to keep the cv axles at the right angle and not wear out the tires while it was set on cruise all day to rack up mileage. The engine barely uses fuel doing that and nothing will wear out. This is a massive tax write off.
take your 18k and use as a down payment on a brand new 2023 toyota corolla hybrid, youd have small payments with the remaining balance but a new new car....
My record is I drove my ass off from Salt lake city to Seattle in one day, around 1000 miles that's around 12 hours of driving. So I can only think of two ways that drives this car around 2500 miles per day. 1) this is not a single guy. Some guys take turns driving it at really high speed and almost non-stop, 24/7. 2) they have a damn car driving machine, just runs the wheel in the air in their garage.
The thing about these 1.5’s is they’re turbos & the turbo will fail eventually & that’s just one more part to fix. I wanted the larger 2.3 cylinders so I can push it to high miles
The Turbos in these Earth dreams Honda are high quality they are made by MHI ( Mitsubishi Heavy industries) these are some of the toughest and well engineered Turbos on the market so much so that they are used in high end BMWs, Turbos can outlast the car as long as they are serviced on time and the oil is changed regularly. The non Turbo Honda earth Dreams engines are just as reliable as the Turbo variants, they are just not as efficient or economical as the 1.5 Turbo and they are dull to drive, I service Hondas and Toyotas day in day, people who are ignorant talk these 1.5 engines down that's because they do not know what they re talking about and don't own one.
if it WAS truly delivering medical supplies its probably a massive business expense tax write off thing; x company buys vehicle and pays for gas, but its labeled under 1 owner for the resale value, and has lets say 4 people drive it 7 days a week around the clock, it likely takes e87 and gets pretty good gas mileage so thats why it'd have been picked and that type of practice is fairly common in medical fields i presume as locally its the same situation, regular cars delivering meds with no marking of the company but still a tax write off because of the use case
@@OldieProductions The amount of time he spent in that car is crazy. He should've kept it as a memoir. I think a camper van would be beneficial for someone who travels that much.
programmed the odometer to that much mileage. No human being can drive 700 miles daily non stop 7 days a week for 365 days straight. Calling bs on this car
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One year has 8766 hours, if he drove a litter over 7300 hours that would mean an 83% of all hours in a year he was awake and driving. That would mean he only slept for 4 hours a night and the rest of the time just driving. My question is when did he ate, took a shit, shower etc.???
This is BS..... no way the #'s are correct... 3-4 day period.... 110 miles would be driven per hour. Maybe 3-4 drivers could split time driving a rig around the clock for a week or two. Can any engine go non-stop for days??
2:00. Not only is it "unthinkable," it's impossible. That's 2,500 miles a day, that's 104 miles for every hour of each of those days. So you're talking about driving non-stop, for 96 straight hours, at an average speed of 104.16 MPH. If you stop, AT ALL, say for gas, you're average speed has to go up a lot to make up for the sitting around. There really is no real way to pull that off, unless you were doing laps on a closed circle course.
With that many miles, how is it that there are no obvious bumper rock and windshield damage? Maybe the buyer dealer repaired the damage that one would assume would have occurred during such a mileage accumulation in such a compressed time frame. I'm naturally skeptical, but having no real data on that line of work, who knows what's true or not. Highway miles I'm told are less destructive on a car's engine than city, stop and go traffic miles. Honda cars are more reliable than many other brands other than Toyota I'm told, but the jury is still out on this one until I get more data on this story. I just purchased a 2022 Honda Civic Hatchback color Sonic Gray Pearl with the 2.0 ltr engine and 6 speed manual and am on currently at 300 miles. I love it an am looking forward to a long, reliable relationship with this machine. Maybe I'll get a job running "legal" pharma products across the continent and prove it one way or another, Not! I'm too old at 67 to run the highways like I did as a youngster,
If you go to the website and look at the listing for the car you can see blemishes here and there on the paint and bumpers. It’s definitely not in perfect condition.
More than likely whoever racked up the mileage is being paid $0.56 / mile (for gas/ware and tear) from the employer plus an hourly rate. The person driving probably made approx this: Let’s say’s salary of $60k/year 248k mileage @ 56cents / mile = $138k mileage reimbursement So they probably cleared $198k from their employer minus taxes. I’m assuming the car cost them roughly $30k, figure close to $35k for gas, another let’s say $15k for maintenance (might be on the high side) So roughly $80k in expenses for the car.
I'm convinced that all these miles were racked up by multiple drivers taking shifts, no way it was just one dude driving that much
I mean a dude in 10th gen accord 1.5 he went on road trips and put 300k miles on it
No worries civics are built like tanks
Last civic I owned had 389,000 miles, original engine and transmission. Can't kill them.
the math doesn't add up for that first four days. To drive 10000 miles in 4 days (96 hours), you'd have to AVERAGE 104 mph non-stop.
Someone probably put it in a machine and kept it running while the people were sleeping
Yup, that seems not possible.
ai driver 😂
Now Honda paying people to say they engines last long
Just get a scan tool and say you did 500k miles in 2 years
As a 2023 Civic touring owner... I'm pretty glad that this car can go up to 400KM+ and still run well.
Honda bro
As a 2022 civic sport owner. Now is 77k still runing better.
its only 1 year any new car does this easily.
10,000 miles in 3 days = 138 miles an hour OR 4 days = 104 miles an hour. . the only way this is possible is putting the car in a custom "running" machine with wheels suspended and driving 138 miles an hour non stop using the machine just to break world record purpose
I was just about to post this. There must have been an error. No way someone could rack up that many miles in 4 days.
Trying to beat the world record that way is straight up cheating, they better drive the car on the roads if they want to beat the record
Just speculating I was thinking more like 400 miles an hour, 10000 miles in Just 4 days crazy
Man made sure he got his money worth out of that car.
He definitely did.
I wonder if the company pays for it. I would have to be making some good good money to pay it off that fast
There’s a video of a guy that drove his 2017 Civic with manual transmission for over 700,000 miles, and he says hes going to try to hit the 1 million mile mark! The civics are very reliable vehicles, and I wouldn’t doubt this red civic would cross 1 million some day🤷♂️
This proves the reliability of Honda CVTs
I can see this happening. I own a 2013 ford escape se and when I bought it it had 37,158 miles on it and i got my driver's license on 10/16/2018 and got my escape on 10/20/2018 and exactly 1 year later it had 139,547 miles on it. I drove everywhere but that's a given when you get your driver's license.
Nobody drives 380 for no good reason.
was this guy a mule? if he ran drugs for a year at this rate, he probably could retire after that... if the cartel didn't kill'em afterwards.
I mean TECHNICALLY it seems like he was running drugs. Lol.
Couldn’t imagine doing a 600 mile commute in the Honda Civic interior. Need to know this man’s ergonomic setup ASAP
Right? My lower back would be destroyed.
Fine for anyone not obese to be fair/realistic
@@peakseamus nothing to do with weight or size, the seats are just not designed for ergonomics. Even the skinniest person can't overcome a lack of ergonomic design, cause Honda has a price point to hit. Cuz it's a Civic, not a high-end Acura. So long distance driving with Civic seats eventually feels like using a wooden kitchen chair with some padding as your office chair - doable but not preferred and it hurts after a while.
@@jst_TV just lose a few pounds 👀😉
@@peakseamus just learn how to read 👀😉
He didn't even need a new battery. . .
The driver should’ve kept it till it got 1 million and get Honda to buy it off them
At the rate he was going it would’ve only taken 3 more years!
He could’ve made a record for the least amount of years to a million!
normal driver in ohio
These Ohio jokes never get old lol.
Why?
I got 200k on my 2018 honda accord 2.0 t.....and I still love it....❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Woww impressive
I’m just at 47k miles after bought 2 year ago with 32k miles I might working 28 miles to 36 miles away 6 days a week then I do a lot of city driving too.
I have a 96 ek ove owned fk8 to a eg6 currently have a 96 ek coupe with a b16a I will always love hondas
Nice! I have a 2000 EX Coupe, I love it!
Was the CVT fluid ever changed?
Bro its a honda ☠️
Dude seemed to busyt driving to care about anything other than consistent oil changes.
I have a Honda…it’s great!
That’s truck driver mileage in a year
Imagine the amount of gas they pay with that year 😂
I pay max $30 every 2 weeks on gas, just yesterday filled up with $26 lol premium too.
I bought my new Honda Civic EX on Feb 1 and today is Feb 22 and I am still on my dealer provided first tank of gas! Just been commenting and running normal errands.
I thought my 2003 accord has too much mileage since its got 234k miles from the last 2 owners
I felt the same about my civic.
Had to be in shuttle service with two or more round trips per day, maybe even round-the-clock, and more than one driver. My guess is moving organs and tissues for transplant surgery.
10,000 miles . should've gotten 3 oil changes in that time , reliability would be a bet better
how the hell did he do that? I have a 2004 Acura TSX and it had 243k miles on it right now.
No idea, but I do know that he was dedicated.
He’s a medical courier. They paid for his gas when he drop fron Houston to Dallas everyday
My 2004 Acura MDX had 350,000 miles on it in 2017 when I got a new SUV and sold it to my sister...who still has it and now maybe has 390,000 miles on it .. she drives much less than I do. Doing 30,000 miles per year and holding a full time office job is very easy to do.
250k highway miles is about 100k city miles. I wouldn’t say it’s exactly a bad car if someone bought it
Honestly it’s probably equivalent to even less. They say 10%. So let’s say for argument sake 90% of the 248k was highway and 10% city it would make it equivalent to roughly 47k
N I’m sitting here stressing 25k in a year 😂
Got an old civic si when I was in highschool had 89000 sold it to my buddy with 185000 or so he drove it while in college funny enough saw him the other day at a gas station in that exact car the thing had 352000 great cars got to love Honda for that even if they ain’t your style
They are definitely reliable.
Are you from the upstate?
Yep.
my grandma’s 2005 kia has HALF that and its definitely been places
I got 2019 accord 1.5 sport finally hit 47k miles after 2 year owning it I got it when it only 32k miles this is mostly city driving but I’ve drove bit further couple time now but if I get a job is 36. Miles away and working 6 day a week I probably hit 60k miles easily and keep going.
There’s no way. This car must have been put up on blocks to keep the cv axles at the right angle and not wear out the tires while it was set on cruise all day to rack up mileage. The engine barely uses fuel doing that and nothing will wear out. This is a massive tax write off.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
could be--like someone who can write off mileage somehow
That's like Day and Night "Fastum Fast" Driving to achieve 250k miles
How do you over 650 miles a day
Was it a 1.5 turbo or the 2.0?
Did they ever done transmission fluid change ?
Cause on the carfax doesn’t show that
The guy literally drove it to the moon
has more than twice the amount of miles than my 85' MR2
More then likely some sleazy dealership will get this car and roll the millage back, which is still possible with Digital dashes.
Carfax would show the correct mileage, so they would have to be pretty dumb to do that.
not w the carfax
Crazy mileage by the time.
That is insane but awesome
bro speed ran his car
My '21 just turned 30k. I just don't get how some people can run up so many miles? If you drive that much, wouldn't you want multiple cars?
2 drivers Atleast driving the car round the clock.
take your 18k and use as a down payment on a brand new 2023 toyota corolla hybrid, youd have small payments with the remaining balance but a new new car....
GOT MY BRAND NEW FL5 TYPE R AND ITS CLOSE TO 1K MILES 😂😂😂 I JUST DROVE IT WEEKENDS FRI TO SUNDAY TO WORK
HOW THE FUCK???????
My record is I drove my ass off from Salt lake city to Seattle in one day, around 1000 miles that's around 12 hours of driving. So I can only think of two ways that drives this car around 2500 miles per day. 1) this is not a single guy. Some guys take turns driving it at really high speed and almost non-stop, 24/7. 2) they have a damn car driving machine, just runs the wheel in the air in their garage.
doesn't make sense to use just one car, though
Dude was probably an Uber driver
The thing about these 1.5’s is they’re turbos & the turbo will fail eventually & that’s just one more part to fix. I wanted the larger 2.3 cylinders so I can push it to high miles
@@juliedumont3685 for a few $1000 dollars! To get it done right with some warranty no thank you.
It's already in the high miles and reliable you hater. Stay on the bus where you belong.
Well, it clearly did not fail up to 250K miles! Not many keep vehicles past 100K these days.
@@juliedumont3685 probably ride the bus, honda doesn't even make a 2.3 cylinder. Talking nonsense
The Turbos in these Earth dreams Honda are high quality they are made by MHI ( Mitsubishi Heavy industries) these are some of the toughest and well engineered Turbos on the market so much so that they are used in high end BMWs, Turbos can outlast the car as long as they are serviced on time and the oil is changed regularly. The non Turbo Honda earth Dreams engines are just as reliable as the Turbo variants, they are just not as efficient or economical as the 1.5 Turbo and they are dull to drive, I service Hondas and Toyotas day in day, people who are ignorant talk these 1.5 engines down that's because they do not know what they re talking about and don't own one.
Obviously, this is highly unusual!
if it WAS truly delivering medical supplies its probably a massive business expense tax write off thing; x company buys vehicle and pays for gas, but its labeled under 1 owner for the resale value, and has lets say 4 people drive it 7 days a week around the clock, it likely takes e87 and gets pretty good gas mileage so thats why it'd have been picked and that type of practice is fairly common in medical fields i presume as locally its the same situation, regular cars delivering meds with no marking of the company but still a tax write off because of the use case
It’s listed as personal use, so unless it was his own private business, this likely isn’t the case.
Bro honda is just different ☠️
No blown head gasket?
Do your oil changes consistently (though most recommend every 5K miles) and don't drive like a teenager on crack and the 1.5t is reliable.
Its about 700 miles a day
Only a honda can take this kinda driving
0:50 I hope that’s not your squatted truck in the backround
It’s definitely not. Belongs to a reject teenager.
@@OldieProductions 😂 I mean you said you live in North Carolina and.. squatted trucks are illegal so yeah
@@shawnsdiecast7852 I live in South Carolina.
@@OldieProductions oops. Idk
Bruh it took my mom's 2008 Honda fit like 14 years to get to 457k kms
My civic is 21 years old with 374k. I thought that was high mileage but this car is next level!
My Hilux is 16 years old and has just 142k kms. This civic driver is insane.
@@firecatinfernus3534 A real madman.
@@OldieProductions The amount of time he spent in that car is crazy. He should've kept it as a memoir. I think a camper van would be beneficial for someone who travels that much.
@@firecatinfernus3534 It is really crazy. Props to him for giving us something cool to talk about though.
Fleet car or Uber driver.
programmed the odometer to that much mileage. No human being can drive 700 miles daily non stop 7 days a week for 365 days straight. Calling bs on this car
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One year has 8766 hours, if he drove a litter over 7300 hours that would mean an 83% of all hours in a year he was awake and driving. That would mean he only slept for 4 hours a night and the rest of the time just driving. My question is when did he ate, took a shit, shower etc.???
It was roughly a year and 1 month that he did all this. Even then, it’s still crazy.
Lives on the country or does Uber
This is BS..... no way the #'s are correct... 3-4 day period.... 110 miles would be driven per hour. Maybe 3-4 drivers could split time driving a rig around the clock for a week or two. Can any engine go non-stop for days??
How younmake thi video and not tell us the engine
10k in 4k is an average of 104 miles an hr for 96 hours. Impossible
2:00. Not only is it "unthinkable," it's impossible. That's 2,500 miles a day, that's 104 miles for every hour of each of those days. So you're talking about driving non-stop, for 96 straight hours, at an average speed of 104.16 MPH. If you stop, AT ALL, say for gas, you're average speed has to go up a lot to make up for the sitting around. There really is no real way to pull that off, unless you were doing laps on a closed circle course.
lol it's a scam of some kind
With that many miles, how is it that there are no obvious bumper rock and windshield damage? Maybe the buyer dealer repaired the damage that one would assume would have occurred during such a mileage accumulation in such a compressed time frame. I'm naturally skeptical, but having no real data on that line of work, who knows what's true or not. Highway miles I'm told are less destructive on a car's engine than city, stop and go traffic miles. Honda cars are more reliable than many other brands other than Toyota I'm told, but the jury is still out on this one until I get more data on this story. I just purchased a 2022 Honda Civic Hatchback color Sonic Gray Pearl with the 2.0 ltr engine and 6 speed manual and am on currently at 300 miles. I love it an am looking forward to a long, reliable relationship with this machine. Maybe I'll get a job running "legal" pharma products across the continent and prove it one way or another, Not! I'm too old at 67 to run the highways like I did as a youngster,
If you go to the website and look at the listing for the car you can see blemishes here and there on the paint and bumpers. It’s definitely not in perfect condition.
You have to drive nearly 20,000 a month!
It’s impressive for sure.
K swap it 😂
Freaking bonkers
More than likely whoever racked up the mileage is being paid $0.56 / mile (for gas/ware and tear) from the employer plus an hourly rate.
The person driving probably made approx this:
Let’s say’s
salary of $60k/year
248k mileage @ 56cents / mile = $138k mileage reimbursement
So they probably cleared $198k from their employer minus taxes.
I’m assuming the car cost them roughly $30k, figure close to $35k for gas, another let’s say $15k for maintenance (might be on the high side)
So roughly $80k in expenses for the car.
Sorry to break it to ya but whistlin diesel isn’t car novelty haha