6 Rules That Will Make Your Car Last 300,000 Miles – A Parts Guy's Maintenance Schedule.

Most people think their car is supposed to die around 150,000 miles. It isn’t. Cars fail early because drivers follow bad maintenance advice or rely on unrealistic numbers in the owner’s manual. After over a decade behind a parts counter, I’ve seen what actually keeps engines alive and what quietly destroys them. These are my personal rules for getting a car to 250,000 to 300,000 miles without turning it into a money pit.

In this video I walk through the real maintenance schedule that works in the real world. I explain how often you should change your oil based on the way you drive, why a good filter makes such a big difference, and how a simple air filter can affect fuel trims, temperatures, and long-term engine health. I also get into the value of using Top Tier fuel, why injector cleaners help prevent hot spots and carbon buildup, and why transmission fluid should always be changed long before any slipping or hard shifting shows up. Finally, I talk about coolant, why the “100,000 mile” or “lifetime” claims are misleading, and how fresh coolant protects aluminum parts and prevents overheating damage that ruins engines long before their time.

If you want honest car care advice from someone who actually works with the parts, the failures, and the customers every day, you’re in the right place. Like the video, subscribe if you want more straight car care truth, and tell me in the comments how long your current car has lasted.

5 Comments

  1. In some respect I have to disagree with you. But with all due respect, modern cars and trucks are not designed to go 300,000 mi. You’re lucky to get 100,000 before the engine grenades or the transmission gives out. Especially GM engines that have the AMF, (active fuel management) system. Which is why there are several lawsuits filed against General Motors. Modern engines have extremely tight tolerances and require 0 w20 and even 0 w40 oil which has a consistency of water to lubricate all the internal components. It’s virtually impossible to get 300,000 miles on a modern engine even with the 6 service recommendations.

  2. 2012 Toyota Camry with 327k plus miles 😁
    Regular maintenance and an honest mechanic!!!

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