85,000 miles huh? That only gives part of an indication of the vehicle's overall life taken off it. What kind of miles were those? Remember that the car is already 6 years old if it's a '98. Any car 6 years old needs attention maintenance-wise. I am a certified technician by trade, and I hear SO many sob stories from customers all day long, every day about "wah, wah, my car this, my car that, why did it break?" And people never are prepared for when it finally breaks due to lack of proper maintenance, and it's now costing them $3000 say, to replace some major thing because they didn't know that a car needs TLC at regular intervals. Did you happen to by chance read your owner's manual and perform all the service procedures at their proper times? Like did you do a 30k or more importantly the 60k service yet? Did you have all the factory recalls and TSBs serviced? You got the 90k service comin up anyways to be ready for. Do you have money set aside for that? I see too many customers who never set aside a dime for maintenance, and it always seems to bite them again and again in their lives. But the wise customers we have, never have this trial because they always plan on scheduled maintenance. Also those same wise people always want us to perform maintenance inspection to find any other things that might need attention even if it wasn't 'scheduled' maintenance per say. Inspections can go a long way to help figure out what a car may need. We always look over and advise customers of any red flags when we do simple oil changes, and half the people have us address them, while others don't seem to care too much. My Contour has been a great car for me since I always give it what it needs. I have 135,000 miles on mine with original motor/trans and it drives like new since I keep it up. It DOES have new O2 sensors on it, new cats, and passes emissions. It has new clutch, CV axles, lower control arms, water pump, and has always had new platinum plugs, new wires, fuel filters, PCV valves, air filters and any other tune-up parts it has ever needed, when it needed them. Not to mention annual coolant drain and fill, trans fluid flushes, brake fluid and power steering fluid flushes, and not to mention 3000 mile oil changes. I have always put the annual $1300 that Consumer Reports magazine estimates for annual maintenance each year on my make/model of car as shown in their auto review issues. Consumer Reports DID rate many of the Honda cars with lower estimated annual maintenance costs than Contour, so maybe you should sell your car, and buy a car that better fits your needs? Check out Consumer Reports car reviews. If your car has a $1300 estimated annual maintenance cost, and you only put a few hundred into it in the 6 years you've had it, then someday when all that maintenance catches up to your ignorance, then you will realize that you have much larger than a $1300 x 6 = ___ dollar bill waiting to suck you dry after you experience parts breakage. I'm just trying to put it in perspective for you is all. What do you expect? It's only a car. Who knows, maybe the dealer you bought the car from put an odometer in with less miles than it has. That's is one of the biggest used car sales tricks goin nowdays. One of the largest listings on www.car-part.com is for their used speedometer heads. So maybe your car has more miles on it than you know? But if so, that was up to you to determine before you laid down your money on it. It's all about laws of physics. Cars wear out. If you take really good care of them, the wear out process can be greatly slowed down. I still love my Contour just as much as the day I bought it at 27,000 miles. I hope to turn 200,000 miles at least before I retire the old drivetrain. All those fluid flushes, and taking care of it whenever something went out of spec is really paying off big time now


'95 CONTOUR SE -Enkei 16s -SVT wannabe -Dual escapes w/ 2 1/2" stainless tips -True LED taillight conversion -Audi Xenon Projector Retrofit -Mp3 deck, dual 10s