1987 NISSAN PATHFINDER

2.4L I4RWDMANUALgas
5-Year Cost of Ownership
$12,128 maintenance + known platform issues
~$2,426/yr · 200¢/mile equivalent · $6,271 maintenance + $5,157 expected platform issues
Compare this engine
vs
3.5L V6 VQ35DE
Common Problems & Known Issues

The 1987 Pathfinder (WD21 chassis) was Nissan's first-gen SUV built on truck bones—the Z24i 2.4L four-cylinder or VG30i 3.0L V6. Solid axles front and rear make it tough, but age and mileage expose weak points in the timing components, cooling system, and rust-prone frame.

Timing Chain Guide and Tensioner Failure (VG30i V6)

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 80,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: Rattling noise on cold start that fades after 10-15 seconds, Metallic slap from front of engine under acceleration, Check engine light with timing-related codes (if equipped), Catastrophic failure: sudden loss of power, bent valves
Fix: Replace timing chain, guides, tensioners, and water pump while you're in there. Front cover comes off, valve covers off. 8-12 hours labor for a thorough job with new gaskets and seals. This is interference on the V6—if the chain jumps or breaks, you're rebuilding heads.
Estimated cost: $1,200-2,200

Timing Chain Stretch and Guide Wear (Z24i Four-Cylinder)

Occasional · medium severity
Typical onset: 100,000-180,000 mi
Symptoms: Cold-start rattle lasting 5-10 seconds, Rough idle when warm, Hard starting due to retarded cam timing
Fix: The Z24i is non-interference, so failure won't destroy valves, but stretched chain causes poor performance. Replace chain, guides, tensioner, front cover gasket. 6-8 hours labor. Less urgent than the V6 but don't ignore it past 120k.
Estimated cost: $800-1,400

Radiator and Heater Core Failure

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: Any—age-related, typically 25+ years
Symptoms: Coolant leaks under vehicle or inside cab (sweet smell, fogged windows), Overheating in traffic or on hills, Rust-colored coolant, external corrosion on radiator tanks
Fix: OEM brass/copper radiators are long gone; aftermarket aluminum units are the fix. Heater core requires full dash removal—10-14 hours labor if you do it right. Radiator is 2-3 hours. Budget for both if the truck has original cooling components.
Estimated cost: $600-1,800 (radiator alone $400-700; heater core $1,200-2,200 with dash R&R)

Frame Rust and Body Mount Rot

Common · high severity
Symptoms: Visible rust perforation on rear frame rails behind rear axle, Rust around body mounts, especially rear corners, Sagging rear body or misaligned doors/tailgate, Cracked or crumbling rubber body mounts
Fix: Frame rust is the killer for these trucks, especially in salt states. Rear frame sections can be plated or replaced (welding required, 12-20 hours if severe). Body mounts are a 4-6 hour job for all eight. Structural rust = walk away unless you're doing frame-off work.
Estimated cost: $1,500-5,000+ depending on severity

Fuel Sending Unit and Fuel Pump Failure

Occasional · low severity
Typical onset: Any—age and corrosion
Symptoms: Inaccurate fuel gauge (reads empty when half-full, or stuck), No-start condition with full tank (pump failure), Intermittent stalling or hesitation under load
Fix: Sending unit float arms corrode and stick; pump itself can fail. Tank drop required (2-3 hours). Replace pump, filter sock, and sending unit as an assembly if available. Aftermarket units are hit-or-miss on gauge accuracy.
Estimated cost: $400-800

Manual Transmission Front Input Bearing Whine

Occasional · low severity
Typical onset: 120,000-200,000 mi
Symptoms: High-pitched whine in neutral with clutch out, disappears when clutch is pressed, Noise increases with RPM, No grinding or difficulty shifting
Fix: Front input shaft bearing (throwout bearing area) wears out. Transmission removal required, 6-8 hours labor. Replace bearing, throwout bearing, and pilot bushing while you're in there. Not urgent but annoying; can go 20k+ miles if noise is tolerable.
Estimated cost: $800-1,400

Vacuum Line Rot and Idle Control Issues

Common · low severity
Symptoms: Rough or high idle, 4WD not engaging or disengaging properly (vacuum-actuated front hubs), Poor fuel economy, hesitation on throttle tip-in
Fix: The maze of vacuum lines under the hood turns brittle and cracks. Diagram it before you start pulling hoses. Replace all suspect lines (1-2 hours), check idle air control valve. 4WD vacuum solenoid and actuators also fail—rebuild kits available.
Estimated cost: $150-400
Owner tips
  • Change oil every 3,000 miles with high-detergent oil to keep timing components clean—sludge kills VG30i chains early.
  • Inspect frame thoroughly before purchase; salt-state trucks often have hidden rot behind rear spring hangers and under body mounts.
  • Flush coolant every two years with proper Nissan-spec coolant; these engines don't tolerate Dex-Cool or universal formulas.
  • Keep the underbody coated if you're in the rust belt—fluid film or oil-based treatments twice a year add years to the frame.
  • If buying: crawl underneath with a screwdriver and poke the frame; if it goes through like cardboard, walk away.
Buy one if the frame is solid and timing work is documented—but budget $2k-3k for deferred maintenance on any survivor; rust and neglected timing chains are the deal-breakers.
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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