I once saw a 1985 Volvo 740 sedan in the Junkyard, and it had 499,000 on it. This girl i know has a 1988 Volvo 240gl that has about 300,000 on it, and although i could hear it about a mile away because of the clicking of the valve train, the rattling of the heat shields, and the occasional screaching and squeaking of the belt, it was still working like new. It was so noisy that this one time i got a ride with her, i thought it was a diesel. The thing that i found strange was that the stock gold paint was in showroom like condition, the windows were not chipped or scatched, and the dashboard was not faded. It must have been garaged its whole life. The only thing about it is that it is slow. Once i was with her and we were getting on the freeway, and it was very slow getting up to speed, and this was mostly because it was a 2.3 liter 4 cylinder with an automatic from the 1980s. This other time, one of my neighbors at my mom's house had a 1976 242dl for sale. At the time, I didnt have a car, and it looked like a good deal. It had 288,000 miles on it, and it had a 4 spd transmission and a 2.3 liter engine. Being $600 and still running, I wish I would have bought this car due to the fact that it wouldnt have to pass smog in California, and i could put a better (more powerful)engine, and a 5 speed transmission(for fuel economy at freeway speeds). I would also be sure that the engine and transmission I put in it are built by Volvo, to make sure it stays a volvo, and not some chevy or ford v8 powered jalopy.
this is what the car (242dl) looked like:
