You won't, and you can't, because the equations have non-linear velocity components. (EDIT : rather than 'non-linear', I think the proper term is 'non-translation-invariant' ? They are neither though.)By just adding flat ±10 km/s after all the calculations you will get exactly that. For the purposes of this "friction" we can just ignore that shift.
Yes, that's my theory now, but it's just a theory, and the above equation is insufficient to confirm or refute for certain this theory.It doesn't matter relative to what the speed must reach zero, since the force of friction is calculated based on that very same relative speed.
At some point the difference would be lower than the displayed precision though.If there is no constant component, then at near-zero speeds the drag will also be near-zero, and the sequence will never converge.