1984 BUICK RIVIERA

231ci V6RWDAUTOMATICgas
5-Year Cost of Ownership
$59,984 maintenance + known platform issues
~$11,997/yr · 1,000¢/mile equivalent · $31,743 maintenance + $7,541 expected platform issues
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3.8L Supercharged V6
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Common Problems & Known Issues

The 1984 Riviera rides on GM's E-body platform with rear-wheel drive—last year before the downsized front-driver arrived. The THM200-4R overdrive transmission and Olds diesel (where fitted) are the main gremlins; gasoline V8s are reasonably stout, but age-related engine work is common as survivors hit 100k+.

THM200-4R Transmission Failure

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 80,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: Slipping on the 3-4 overdrive shift or flaring between gears, Delayed engagement into reverse, Overheating due to failing oil cooler inside radiator contaminating coolant (pink or milky fluid), Complete loss of forward gears
Fix: Rebuild is 12-16 hours including R&R; external cooler and separator plate upgrade strongly recommended during rebuild to prevent future failures. Many shops pull the trans at first sign of cooler cross-contamination.
Estimated cost: $2,200-3,800

350 Diesel Engine Catastrophic Failure

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 60,000-90,000 mi
Symptoms: White smoke on startup (injector pump timing off or head gasket leaking), Hard starting or no-start after sitting, Cracked cylinder heads (notorious casting weakness), Spun main bearings or crankshaft failure from inadequate oiling
Fix: Most diesel Rivieras now need complete engine rebuild or replacement. Crankshaft R&R alone is 18-22 hours; full rebuild 24-30 hours. Used runners are nearly extinct; Goodwrench reman LF9 blocks dried up years ago. Gasoline 307 or 350 Olds swaps are common exits.
Estimated cost: $4,500-7,500

Piston Ring Wear and Oil Consumption (Gas V8s)

Occasional · medium severity
Typical onset: 110,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: Blue smoke on deceleration or startup, Burning a quart every 500-800 miles, Fouled spark plugs on rear bank, Low compression readings (under 120 psi)
Fix: Ring job requires heads-off, 14-18 hours labor. At this mileage many owners opt for short-block swap (20-24 hours) since bearings and cylinder walls often show wear. Factory 305/307 Chevy engines are cheap cores; Olds 350s harder to source.
Estimated cost: $2,800-4,200

Transmission Mount Collapse

Common · medium severity
Symptoms: Clunk on throttle tip-in or lifting off the gas, Excessive drivetrain movement visible from underneath, Vibration at idle in gear
Fix: Rear transmission crossmember mount fatigues; rubber separates from metal. Simple replacement, 0.8-1.2 hours on a lift. Often discovered during transmission work but should be checked annually on high-mileage cars.
Estimated cost: $120-220

Fuel System Varnish and Stalling (Long-Term Storage)

Occasional · medium severity
Symptoms: Stumbling or dying at idle after sitting months/years, Hard restart when hot, Surging cruise on gasoline engines, no-start on diesel
Fix: Quadrajet carbs (gas) gum up; throttle-body injection (rare '84 option) clogs. Diesel injection pumps seize internally. Carb rebuild 2-3 hours, fuel filter and line flush another 1-2 hours. Diesel injection pump replacement 4-6 hours plus core charge.
Estimated cost: $350-950

Crankshaft Position Sensor / Distributor Issues (Gas Engines)

Occasional · medium severity
Typical onset: 90,000+ mi
Symptoms: No-start with cranks but no spark, Intermittent stalling when hot, Check-engine light (early ECM cars)
Fix: HEI distributor pickup coil or module failure common; 1.5 hours to diagnose and replace module/coil. Occasionally the distributor shaft bushings wear causing timing drift—requires distributor R&R and rebuild, 3-4 hours.
Estimated cost: $180-550
Owner tips
  • Change transmission fluid and filter every 30k; add external cooler if towing or hot-climate use—radiator-mounted cooler kills more 200-4Rs than anything.
  • Avoid the Olds diesel unless you're a masochist or already have spare parts inventory; even good ones are on borrowed time.
  • Check frame rail rust near rear control-arm mounts (salt-belt cars)—structural safety issue that nobody budgets for.
  • Keep fresh gas in the tank if storing; carburetors and fuel pumps don't tolerate ethanol sitting for months.
Gasoline V8 with documented transmission service—yes, at the right price; diesel engine or unknown trans history—hard pass unless you wrench your own.
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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