2004 INFINITI Q45

4.5L V8RWDAUTOMATICgas
5-Year Cost of Ownership
$39,033 maintenance + known platform issues
~$7,807/yr · 650¢/mile equivalent · $5,159 maintenance + $13,924 expected platform issues
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4.1L V8
Common Problems & Known Issues

The 2004 Q45 with its VK45DE V8 is a luxury sleeper that suffers from catastrophic engine failures due to oil consumption and cylinder scoring, plus transmission cooler leaks that can grenade the 5-speed auto. When they're good, they're great—but the engine rebuild risk is real.

Cylinder Scoring and Catastrophic Oil Consumption (VK45DE Engine)

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 80,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: Blue smoke on startup or acceleration, Oil consumption 1+ quart per 1,000 miles, Misfires and rough idle, Low compression on multiple cylinders, Check engine light with P0300-series codes
Fix: The VK45DE is notorious for cylinder wall scoring due to inadequate piston skirt design and cooling. Pistons scuff the cylinder walls, creating grooves that leak compression and burn oil. Fix requires complete engine rebuild with bore/hone and oversized pistons, or short-block replacement. 25-35 hours labor plus machine work.
Estimated cost: $6,000-12,000

Transmission Oil Cooler Failure (Cross-Contamination)

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 90,000-140,000 mi
Symptoms: Pink or milky transmission fluid, Coolant level drops with no external leaks, Transmission slipping or delayed engagement, Overheating transmission, Strawberry milkshake in coolant reservoir
Fix: Internal cooler in the radiator fails, allowing coolant and ATF to mix. Once contaminated, the transmission is often damaged beyond flushing—requires full rebuild or replacement. Must replace radiator, flush entire cooling system, and rebuild/replace transmission. 18-24 hours total labor.
Estimated cost: $4,500-7,500

Transmission Mount Collapse

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 70,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: Clunk when shifting from Park to Drive/Reverse, Excessive driveline vibration at idle in gear, Visible sagging of transmission tailshaft, Banging noise over bumps
Fix: The rear transmission mount is hydraulic-filled and prone to collapse, allowing excessive drivetrain movement. Replacement is straightforward but requires supporting the transmission. 2-3 hours labor.
Estimated cost: $400-650

Head Gasket Seepage (Both Banks)

Occasional · medium severity
Typical onset: 100,000-160,000 mi
Symptoms: Coolant weeping from head/block mating surface, Sweet coolant smell from engine bay, Slow coolant loss with no external puddles, White residue on block near head joint
Fix: The VK45 can develop external head gasket leaks, usually seeping coolant rather than blowing into cylinders. Both banks often need addressing simultaneously. Requires head removal, resurfacing, and new gaskets. 16-20 hours labor if catching it early before warpage.
Estimated cost: $3,000-4,500

Brake Light Switch Premature Failure

Occasional · low severity
Symptoms: Brake lights not illuminating, Cannot shift out of Park, Cruise control won't engage, Intermittent brake light operation
Fix: Subject to NHTSA recall but switches continue to fail outside recall scope. The switch above the brake pedal fails internally. Simple replacement, 0.5 hours labor.
Estimated cost: $150-250

Connecting Rod and Main Bearing Wear

Occasional · high severity
Typical onset: 120,000-180,000 mi
Symptoms: Knocking noise from lower engine on cold start, Metallic rattling under load, Low oil pressure at idle when hot, Metal shavings in oil filter
Fix: Related to the oil consumption issue—once cylinders score and oil consumption begins, bearing surfaces get inadequate lubrication. Requires full crankshaft removal, inspection, possible machining, and new bearings. Often discovered during compression diagnosis. 30+ hours labor.
Estimated cost: $5,000-9,000
Owner tips
  • Check oil level every 500 miles religiously—early detection of consumption can prevent catastrophic failure
  • Inspect transmission fluid color at every oil change; any pink tint means immediate radiator replacement
  • Use quality 5W-30 synthetic and change every 3,500-4,000 miles to fight cylinder scoring
  • Budget $1,000/year for surprise repairs if buying high-mileage
  • Borescope inspection of cylinders before purchase can reveal scoring early
Buy only with documented low oil consumption and clean compression test—otherwise you're gambling on a $10K engine rebuild.
AI-assisted summary drawn from NHTSA recall data, our labor-times database, and platform knowledge. Not a substitute for a pre-purchase inspection on a specific vehicle.
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