Jaak:“I know what my cars need and when they need it. I do not want to be stranded on some out of the way place with broken water hose, bad battery, broken drive belt, flat tire, or any other common hazards with the many systems and components. I work closely with an independent auto mechanic only - I do not use dealers service centers. Therefore, I change the coolant, brake fluid, brake pads, and some other consumables more frequently than manufacturer/dealer recommendations based on wear/deterioration that I see.”
Fine, but you’ll probably find the nail in the tire could care less about how new your tire is. I’ve had almost brand new tires ruined by nail in sidewall that couldn’t be fixed safely…to tires with 40,000.
But…unlike most new car owners, I actually have a compact spare tire in my 2016 Malibu. Paid extra to get the tire, jack, etc, in the back of the car. The normal Malibu comes with a can of ‘inflator’ and an inflator air pump. Useless for cut tire or nail in sidewall.
Yeah, I don’t want to be stranded out in boonies…so dealer checks belts and hoses every oil change. Checks fluids. Amp tests battery to see if it is about to die.
Coolant lasts 100K miles, unlike old days. Changing it sooner does nothing.
I haven’t had a car ‘die on me’ in decades. (It was usually the crappy GM alternator that died on older GM cars that gave you about 10 miles to find a repair station at just over 70K miles). The Prius 12v little gel=cell died and car wouldn’t start in garage. Jump started it and drove to dealer. Fixed.
I’ve driven through EVERY COUNTY in the USA on mostly secondary roads - through the boonies - through the cities - everywhere. I have no issues with driving modern cars from GM. But I’ve probably averaged a flat tire once every 50,000 miles but that happens on every car. Put decent tires on cars, too.
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