İs it just me or seeing normal cars that you can afford on this channel is way better than seeing million dollar sport cars that you can only dream about
well some people can afford it though and besides there not millions of dollars, so before u get on about how u like to see normal cars remember the people who can afford “expensive cars”
My family bought a 2004 pilot brand new, we just sold it to a junk yard last year with 195k miles on it (had too many issues to fix) It was a solid car, my family never took care of it maintenance wise but it survived the abuse and a ton of family road trips, it was really comfortable to drive and sit inside.
I see what you mean, I had a beater honda civic that lasted 300,000 km and it had a bunch of problems. Most people would be unhappy that their car broke but I'm extremely happy because I'm surprised it lasted this long under my negligence
I got a 2006 with 130,000k. I got it with 108,000k as my first car. 3rd year in college and this thing helped me move so many things, got me through several road trips, and over rough terrain many times. Its built like a tank. Takes impact very well and wants to keep going every time I step on the gas. All I do is my oil changes and tires. I don’t plan on getting rid of it any time soon. Its better than most new cars of the same class imo
I remember my relatives had an (I think) 03 Pilot EX-L in black. It was definitely a big leap forward for Honda, and kind of foretold the future with large crossovers.
It’s crazy how these Pilots are almost 20 years old and they are still heavily sought after. When I was working at a dealership, people paid top dollar for them and would go crazy if it was an EX-L. Comes to show how great these older Pilots are.
The first generation Pilots honestly looked the best for me. Very simple design, simple throughout the interior, and just has that Honda quality we love back in the day. This car brings me back to the mid to late 2000s, when my parents bought a 2005 Pilot. Plus you can't beat that iconic 3.5-L V6 that Honda has used for yearsss.
My mom had a 2010 with 215k miles, it had been in 4 accidents and it was still in decent shape when we traded it in this year for her 4Runner. These are such nice cars
I remember having the 2005 Honda Pilot, and let me say, it was a wonderful Honda vehicle. And this one still reminds you that Honda's vehicles are like tanks. I mean 19 years later, this car still looks like it's in great condition, and still running well. I just love the old school feeling this gives me when I see this, because I remember this interior all too well :D Definitely an old vehicle, but in a good way~~ Even the exterior styling still looks great in my opinion. Honda was at their prime during this time~~ This Pilot still proves the quality that Honda had back in the day. Finally, that iconic 3.5-L V6 we still know and love in the current Pilot and MDX still sounds amazing.
I have an 04. These things have such a comfortable ride. Oh and that vtec sounds way to good. Pretty peppy for what they are and feel strong in terms of power. Though lacks a little low end torque, it still feels plenty peppy even mine with 200k miles on it. It rips hard once you get the Rpms above 3k. Best part is the throttle response. Idk if it’s my intake or the car but it’s really responsive from a dead stop. Steering it a bit tipsy and numb, but decently accurate for the age and size of the car. Still a very good family car!
Omg thank you, I have an 03 and I was a bit surprised at the sloppy feeling steering after going from an 02 CR-V, but I seriously love how comfortable my Pilot is, I had to get a console cover because my elbow got super sore after driving a couple hours but whatevs!
The 5-speed automatic probably makes it slow too because of that wide gearing, but as with all Honda engines, it's nice to rev them out a lot for them to go anywhere :) And just hearing that iconic J-series V6 is a blessing.
@@TonyKimtheamusementparkfan it definitely slows them down. With a 6 speed it would definitely shred. But feel is a different story and these powertrains (despite the long gearing and slow outright acceleration) feel incredibly strong and peppy in normal driving and super responsive. I almost prefer driving this pilot over my family’s 2017 highlander for this reason
My mother has a 2004 Pilot, and I drive it from time to time. It feels very nice and smooth. Only really had like 2 or 3 major issues, one was when the car got wrecked on accident back in '07 where a lot of body panels had to be replaced. We had the transmission replaced in 2016 for... obvious reasons if you know anything about Y2K-early 2000s era Honda V6 cars. Now there's an issue with stalling and honestly I suspect it to be the fuel pump (more specifically the strainer), which never got replaced. The car is an EX, and has 170k miles on it since she bought it new in May of 2004. It is still very well maintained and garage kept. She may get a new car in a year or 2, but she holds on to dear life with this thing. It's HER car, and nothing can replace it right now. And I can see why. It's quick, smooth, spacious, and it's very reliable. These engines were also more powerful than what other competitors had. Like, come on... GM only got ~210HP from their 3500 V6! ...give or take a few figures. Honda had 240HP in this, and DAMN was it quick! Not too fast, not too slow, but perfect! The 2005 actually did get a 255HP engine, and 2006-08 got 244 for some reason. The newer 2nd gen ones just didn't capture the spirit the old ones had, and in some cases were less safe. Also, fun fact, especially if you are working on one I guess: the 2003 model year is the only pilot that did not have a trumpet/hi-lo tone horn. It has a horn much like you'd hear in the CR-V from the time.
We have a EX-L with 182k miles runs and drives great we love it, paid 4K for it best one Ive seen, this one is in better shape mine needs a headliner and some paint correcting
Reminds me of the 2005 Honda Civic my mom used to drive, such a classic Honda startup. Also love that VTEC crossover noise at 5000 RPM that we all know and love~
I just watched my 2004 model get towed to the forever box so seeing this made me shed a big boy tear.... I already miss my car so much and it's only been 5 minutes. It drove me from diaper to degree with a few weeks to spare on both ends.
3 row SUVs, when ppl who needed a van decided that being trendy is more important, and they rather not have wide sliding doors , easy access to seats, vastly more space that is easy to arrange and clean, boot that does not require power lifting to fill etc etc.
Neat to have a 2003 test drive in 2020! This is the OLD original Honda quality that we hope Honda can bring back one day. My 2004 does not look like a minivan nor have any of the start/stop/VCM crap. Simple and reliable is what is MIA in today's vehicles.
Honda Pilot is the best SUV you can buy.I.have a 2004 Honda Pilot. It has over 253,000 miles. I change the oil every 3000 miles. The only serious problem I've had was not changing the transmission fluid regularly. It started slipping at 227,000 miles and I had to have it rebuilt. Since the rebuilt it been running great.
Jeez I miss my 2005 Honda Pilot EX-L. Nothing feels like that Pilot did. It was back when Honda's had character and rack & pinion steering with great feel. It handled so well for its size.
My 05 Pilot with 211k does that noise...i thought something was wrong with the transmission but apparently from what ive been told with people who have experience with them that its a normal noise that most of them do.
I never understood why Honda geared the V6 5 speed autos to have such long, dead gears. The J35 likes to rev. It doesn't like to be lugged around. The torque converters on these slip sooo much to make up for the lack of torque provided by the gear ratio. The torque converter doesn't even lockup in drive until 48 mph! That's very late for a 21st century automatic. The tall gearing is exacerbated any time you fill up the car with people or stuff, or god forbid you tow something. (better off using D3 if you do)
Short gears = worse MPG. Also, I'm probably going to get heat for this, but this is part of the reason peaky Honda engine are overrated. The real problem isn't the gearing, it's the engine. You have to ring the nuts off of a J series to get power, which makes them less driveable and less efficient, particularly in a heavy family SUV application.
@@thisjustin878 It seems bizarre to me that Honda would use gearing in their heaviest vehicles to squeeze out a miniscule 10% better mpg by using gearing so tall to the point it begins to hinder drivability. Yet, so many of their manual transmission are geared extremely short yet still deliver excellent real world mpg. Even if Honda deliberately geared the transmission tall to improve mpg, they could have done a better job by making gears 1-4 shorter and closer together, that way drivability is improved, the driver is less frustrated, and the probability of being in the "right" gear is increased, then 5th would be reserved for low rpm cruising. But no, Honda's engineers flat out gave the V6 engines very tall gears for no reason, then designed the torque converter to compensate by slipping tremendously. The result is worse efficient from drivetrain loss than if they used shorter gears and locked the torque converter earlier. If these transmissions were DSGs, they would literally be undrivable. The torque converter in these transmissions are heavily exploited to produce massive torque multiplication in every gear.
I wonder why they did that too. My 2004 Acura MDX shifts from first gear at around 4000-4200 rpms even at around 40% throttle. My dad and I always that it was a sensor problem or something like that but it's not. They're programed to shift like that or something.
Loved this car, only bad thing, was timing belt, ignition, and transmission shudder. Not a fun time, im glad to be trading her. Big car tho. More than 4 people in your family? Get a pilot.
My mom has a 2005 EX-L, it’s a fantastic car (and gas hog), but finally she will be upgrading to a 2017 Mazda CX-5 Tomorrow. The ol gas hog is due for an upgrade
@Jonathan Losito Not a huge fan of crossovers either, but after riding in a CX-5 it rides so much better than sedans and I think I prefer sitting up higher.