Probably not the 6 figures most people would care about, but I hit the big 100k yesterday on the way home from work in my 04.
Bought the car about 4 1/2 years ago with 43K on the odometer and have pretty much daily driven it since. A few longer road trips (bringing it home, going to watch a race a few states away, etc.), 2 track days, and plenty of gas and oil later and it still pretty much drives the same.
For an idea of long term reliability for the car for those interested, in the 57k miles I've driven it, I've replaced the oil cooler lines, the power steering main pressure line and fitting, the power steering pump, and the shocks due to failure/poor performance of each component. The shocks were the only really "expensive" fix, but I also wanted to upgrade them anyway, so it worked out. I've also replaced some more general maintenance stuff like a clutch a few thousand miles ago, the plug wires (broke the insulation on one or two installing headers), brake pads, tires, and fluids. I also replaced the diff with a gen 4 unit as I think mine was making a little noise after an "off-road event", but I wouldn't call that a typical replacement issue as it was my own fault.
All told the car has been a joy to drive every mile and is still fun to this day. It never gets old to hop in it to go to work in the morning and miles don't seem to bother it at all. It still puts down nearly 500 hp at the tires with 530 ft-lbs, so age doesn't seem to have dulled its edge any either.
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Bought the car about 4 1/2 years ago with 43K on the odometer and have pretty much daily driven it since. A few longer road trips (bringing it home, going to watch a race a few states away, etc.), 2 track days, and plenty of gas and oil later and it still pretty much drives the same.
For an idea of long term reliability for the car for those interested, in the 57k miles I've driven it, I've replaced the oil cooler lines, the power steering main pressure line and fitting, the power steering pump, and the shocks due to failure/poor performance of each component. The shocks were the only really "expensive" fix, but I also wanted to upgrade them anyway, so it worked out. I've also replaced some more general maintenance stuff like a clutch a few thousand miles ago, the plug wires (broke the insulation on one or two installing headers), brake pads, tires, and fluids. I also replaced the diff with a gen 4 unit as I think mine was making a little noise after an "off-road event", but I wouldn't call that a typical replacement issue as it was my own fault.
All told the car has been a joy to drive every mile and is still fun to this day. It never gets old to hop in it to go to work in the morning and miles don't seem to bother it at all. It still puts down nearly 500 hp at the tires with 530 ft-lbs, so age doesn't seem to have dulled its edge any either.