Pacifica issues?

I'm looking at an '04Pacifica to replace my '97 Intrepid. Are there any issues with it? Anyone have one that they can offer an opinion on?

I love my intrepid, but after 10 years, its time. :-)

Reply to
Jimbo
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Heavy & higher fuel consumption than your Intrepid.

Spare mounted underneath the rear, very cheap for a vehicle being sold as higher end.

-Checking spare air pressure may require a ground sheet.

-Can a full sized space be carried?

Is your Intrepid running well? If so why trade it.

Reply to
Some O

Reply to
jdoe

Good question. It is running well, but my mechanic has put it on a do-not-resucitate. He said that whatever is wrong with it (and I have forgotten) may kill it in 10k, or 30k, but when it does, it probably isn't worth replacing.

With that, my wife is kind of tired of it and wants a car she doesn't have to worry about breaking if she is driving it. We live fairly rurally.

I love the car. Its been great for me. 176k, lots of room and power.

Some O wrote:

Reply to
Jimbo

Reply to
Jimbo

I have a '95 Concord, basically the same car, and I'm going to run it until a major failure occurs. I expect that will be the transmission, but I've serviced it very well and am only at 130K kms. Is your "K" "miles" or "kms"?

It's value is only about C$2,500 so nothing lost if it fails. That $2,500 would barely cover the extended warranty on a new car. Being of such low value it wouldn't bother me if I had to just tow it to a junk (recycling) yard. The engine would cover the towing cost. The most likely cause of failure is a write off if some idiot in an SUV driving too fast hits me.

It looks and runs very well and noth> Good question. It is running well, but my mechanic has put it on a

Reply to
Some O

My '94 LHS is quickly approaching 300,000 km and the current transmission is still going strong. The original unit failed shortly after I had Mr. Lube do their "preventative maintenance" on it, only to discover (too late) it left their bay with far less transmission fluid than when it had arrived. Thankfully, although it was no longer under warranty, Jim Davidson Chrysler replaced it at no charge. Needless to say, I'm only too happy to sing their praises and when it came time to buy my 300M Special, there was no question who was going to get my business.

Cheers,. Paul

Reply to
Paul M. Eldridge

Suspension components on the ones I saw were rusted on the new car lot. A turn off.

Reply to
Art

Reply to
philthy

We are if a similar mind, down to the fusion. But with the engine the way it is, we only drive it around town. which is fine, but sometimes we want more mileage than the other car, a '98 JGC with the 318, gets.

I do love the LH series. Too bad they let it die.

Jimbo Some O wrote:

Reply to
Jimbo

Why not buy 300C?

Best looking car around and very well build.

47000 mls on odometer and no worries so far.

Rockman

"Jimbo" kirjoitti viestissä: snipped-for-privacy@51g2000cwl.googlegroups.com...

Reply to
Rockman

Ugly grill and inadequate window space eliminated the 300 for me.

Reply to
Art

I had an 04 with all kinds of issues, i bought it new,had computer issues galore. Took it to the dealer many times,and decided to trade it in on a 06 wrangler (something that won't have to many computer issues) before the warranty went out. i owned many chryslers, but would never recomend a pacifica to anyone.

Reply to
Mike

Still a big hassle, having to buy new car under such circumstances. Much easier to do it in a controlled manner in one's own time.

DAS

For direct contact replace nospam with schmetterling

Reply to
Dori A Schmetterling

Agreed. The Intrepid is still rolling around, and I still love the car, so this process may take more than a year. ;-)

One thing, we have a ginormous car seat. The Intrepid swallows it nicely. The Jeep not as much. We had a line on an '03 Concorde for $12,999, but my wife wanted a slightly smaller car with better mileage. On the other side of that, she likes the Pacifica. She doesn't like the 300 (though I do, and the Charger has grown on me).

So...

We are looking at the Pacifica, a Subaru, and the Fusion. I'm a Chrysler guy at heart, though, so this is where I like to look.

When I bought the > Still a big hassle, having to buy new car under such circumstances. Much

Reply to
Jimbo

Hi Jim,

When you say your wife wants something smaller than the Concorde and with better gas mileage, somehow I can't picture the Pacifica. ;-)

I know little about this vehicle beyond what I've read here. The only person I know who owned one, bought a first year model and was not totally happy with it (she traded it in a little over a year ago). Lots of minor problems and a tendency to stall when making a hard left turn. I put this down to being an early production model and no doubt many of these problems would have been worked-out as time went on. I suspect the other part of the problem was her poor experience with the local dealer.

I don't know how the Concorde stacks-up to the Pacifica in terms of outward visibility, but both you and your wife should check for blind spots (both would have their weaknesses in this regards). If I had to choose between the two, I'd pick the Concorde, even though I'm not all that struck on the front end (I think I once described it here as looking like a "dead fish sucking on a lemon").

Although I'm not an huge fan of the new 300, I've rented one a couple times on business and compared to my two vehicles, two things strike you right off the bat: one, the handling on dry pavement is absolutely superb (don't have any experience with snow) and, secondly, it's eerily QUIET. The difference in quietness between the current and previous generations is night an day (my first-generation LHS suffers from wind noise and tire noise on the 300M Special is unbelievably loud compared to any other car OR truck I know).

My '94 LHS will be retired in the next year or so and I, too, will start looking for its replacement shortly. I don't have a clue what to buy but I prefer it to be another Chrysler. That said, a plug-in hybrid is what I truly want and whoever comes out of the gate first is likely to be the winner.

Good luck in your search.

Cheers, Paul

Reply to
Paul M. Eldridge

Don't fool yourself into thinking that Subarus are without problems. They have compromised their designs over the last few years for performance to the point that they have lots of early parts failures (clutches, brakes, rear wheel bearings, etc.).

Bill Putney (To reply by e-mail, replace the last letter of the alphabet in my address with the letter 'x')

Reply to
Bill Putney

Electrical issues come to mind with the Subaru.

Ken

Reply to
NJ Vike

The 300 grill is growing on me. I would like one in Inferno Red. What's the next generation 300 going to look like?

I was at the car show this weekend here in the Meadowlands and Chrysler or Dodge weren't even a show.

I do like the Cadillac models, Acura TL, Lexus ES350 and the Audi A6. The one that I think I would purchase would be the new GMC Acadia.

Ken

Reply to
NJ Vike

I remember the days when a Subaru *WAS* a rolling problem! But people tolerated them for the AWD and fun-factor. Today, they seem to be just another generic Japanese car, with the exception of the WRX. A co worker just got a new Forester turbo, and it oozes "generic" even with the turbo. But I don't seem to hear the same gripes about never-ending maintenance that I used to.

Reply to
Steve

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