1995 Honda Accord EX (Sedan, 4Dr)

Discussion in 'Accord' started by Hemant Mohapatra, Mar 30, 2006.

  1. Hello Everyone,

    I am planning to purchase a 1995 Honda Accord EX (Sedan, 4 Door). Here
    are the CarFax Details:

    Year/Make/Model: 1995 HONDA ACCORD EX

    Body Style: SEDAN 4 DR
    Engine: 2.2L L4 SOHC PFI 16V
    Fuel: GASOLINE
    Driveline: FRONT WHEEL DRIVE
    Safety Equipment: 4 wheel ABS, Dual front air bags/active (manual)
    belts
    Standard Equipment: Power Windows, Power Steering, Air Conditioning, AM
    / FM Cassette, Power Brakes, Power sun / moon roof, Tilt Wheel, 6-digit
    Odometer


    Now I am a car novice (this is my first car) and do not know much about
    the internals. I was wondering if anyone has any opinions on how the
    above car with 147,000 miles on it could drive (till how many miles do
    Hondas drive reliably anyway?).

    Also the CarFax history has two items that caught my eyes:

    1 ) First owner Registered as corporate lease vehicle.
    2 ) Offered for sale at dealership.

    I dont really know what corporate leasing is all about. If anyone could
    tell me if it's bad for a vehicle to be on a corporate fleet? and how
    about it being on a dealership?

    Thanks,
    Hemant
     
    Hemant Mohapatra, Mar 30, 2006
    #1
  2. Hemant  Mohapatra

    jmattis Guest

    This car spent its entire life on the highway; a very good sign. If it
    has had the waterpump replaced along with manufacturer's required fluid
    changes, it could go another 147,000 miles with various parts replaced
    along the way. This is a 2.4 liter engine that has a timing chain
    rather than a fabric belt, which is good for lower maintenance, but
    they may have skipped the pump replacement which is expensive (normally
    on Honda you do fabric belt & pump replacement at about 100,000 miles
    as part of the maintenance).

    I'd get the engine compression checked to see if they changed the oil
    regularly or the rings could be shot. (First take the oil cap off the
    engine while running and see if blow-by wants to rush out of the
    crankcase; excessive blowby indicates the rings are going. Also look
    at the inside of the cap and down into the engine for sludge buildup
    (not changing oil) or jelly-like gunk (coolant leaking into the engine
    due to gasket failure) Check the transmission fluid if it is an
    automatic; if it is dark and smells burned instead of a nice pink with
    an oily smell, that would signal a problem. These are simple checks
    that can tell you a lot for free before you bother to hire a mechanic's
    expertise.) Look for paint mismatch or areas around body fasteners
    under the hood or trunk that show removal -- signs the car's been
    wrecked. Check the doors, body panels and tire wear for alignment
    problems, again the car could have been wrecked if these show up.

    The problem is, the car is still not very old and you still won't get a
    really huge, huge discount for all the miles. Personally, I'd shoot
    for a 4 or 5 year old honda. It is financially a wiser choice. The
    2005 has seen a lot of use, and it will not be more reliable than a
    2000 model with similar mileage, but will be much more expensive.
    Depends on how much you love the look of the newer generation.
     
    jmattis, Mar 30, 2006
    #2
  3. Hemant  Mohapatra

    Elle Guest

    On a 1995? www.hondaautomotiveparts.com says it's a belt,
    from my reading.

    snip otherwise good stuff.

    To the OP: If you need pricing guidance, www.edmunds.com
    offers good info for used cars.
     
    Elle, Mar 30, 2006
    #3
  4. Hemant  Mohapatra

    jmattis Guest

    Nope, it's a chain now. the 2.4 is state of the art.
     
    jmattis, Mar 30, 2006
    #4
  5. Hemant  Mohapatra

    jmattis Guest

    I meant yes, your right, the new 2.4 engine is very advanced with the
    chain.
     
    jmattis, Mar 30, 2006
    #5
  6. Hemant  Mohapatra

    E Meyer Guest

    A '95 Accord 2.4 does NOT have a timing chain. It has a belt, due for
    change every 90k miles.
     
    E Meyer, Mar 31, 2006
    #6
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