You have to change it every 24,000 miles (green coolant) or 100,000 miles (extended-life coolant). If you keep driving on worn coolant, expect to replace the radiator, heater core and water pump.
- Change your fluids regularly
Transfer case fluid and differential oil changes are cheap and easy. Replacing these components will cost you about $1,500 each—a high price to pay for neglect.
A clogged cabin air filter puts an added load on your car's A/C system and reduces heat in winter. Replace it at least once a year.
Test your coolant with a voltmeter. Set your digital voltmeter on the lowest DC setting reading and dip the positive probe right into the coolant. Touch the negative probe to the negative battery terminal and rev the engine to 2,000 rpm. If the reading is .4 volts or more, your coolant is toast.
If you have cloudy headlights, you don't have to replace them or live with them. Clean them with a specially designed kit.
- Clean corroded battery terminals
Corrosion puts added strain on your charging system and can mess with computer-controlled systems. Cleaning is your cheapest insurance against electrical problems.
- Defroster grid out of action
Yes, you can fix this yourself. Pick up a Permatex Quick Grid repair kit ($13) at any auto parts store. Follow the instructions and you'll be defrosting in no time.
- Don't mix different types of coolants
Green, yellow, red, orange and blue coolants create cool “mud” when mixed. Cost of a new heater core: $400 to $1,000.