driving from ND to TN with Honda Civic 2006
Hi all, I need your expertise here and any opinions are highly appreciated.
I'm planning to drive my Honda Civic 2006 (186k miles) from fargo ND to Memphis, TN and I'm wondering if I can make it whole trip in 2 days (1050 miles). I'll be taking I 29 and planning night stay near kansas city, MO. I drove this car manytimes to minneapolis i.e. 250 miles. Has anyone here done a road trip with this relatively old car and so many mileage? Also what specific things I should ask mechanic to look for and make sure my car make it to memphis without breaking in between. I'm quite new at this and I wonder how risky this trip would be. I really appreciate your input.
Thanks in advance.
Cars Ain't what They Used to Be
Welcome aboard the RoadTrip America Forums!
When I was a youngster (back when dinosaurs still roamed the Earth), in the days of planned obsolescence and yearly styling changes, watching the odometer 'turn over' at 100,000 miles and go back to zero was a memorable event. Now many cars are equipped with an extra tumbler that will allow them to register (if not actually drive) a million miles, and ten years is no longer considered an ancient age for a car. If, as you say, your car still gives you good reliable service on 250 mile runs, there's really no reason to be terribly concerned that it will break down on a thousand mile trip. Remember that highway miles are the easiest on your vehicle, and cell towers line the major Interstates so that you should rarely, if ever, be without phone service.
Still, if you haven't had your car checked thoroughly in a while, a relatively long RoadTrip is as good an excuse as any to give it a detailed inspection. Any good mechanic will know what to inspect and what to look for: drive train, tires, brakes, cooling system, oil leakage, structural integrity, etc. What's not clear from your question is whether you already have a mechanic that you trust to do such an inspection without finding unnecessary repairs that he can do to line his own pocket. If you do need to find such a mechanic there are a few routes you can go. The easiest is to simply ask your friends who have some auto experience or knowledge whom they use and see if they agree on someone. The second is to use a reliable public source such as AAA or Public Radio's Car Talk Mechanics Files.
Finally, While it's true that you can get to Memphis in around 1050 miles by way of Kansas City, that's only true if you also use MO-13/US-60/US-63 through the northern fringes of the Ozark Mountains. And even then, KC is not a good halfway point since it is 600 miles from Fargo, farther than we would normally recommend driving in a day. A better midway stopping point might be St. Joseph MO. As an alternative route, I'd suggest looking at I-94/I-35 through Minneapolis to Mason City IA, then US-18/US-218 to Waterloo, I-380 to Iowa City, and US-218/US-61 south from there to St. Louis and I-55 the rest of the way to Memphis. That's a flatter route of almost the exact same length, and should be easier on your car. Halfway on that route would be right around Iowa City.
AZBuck