1992 NISSAN PICKUP

2.4L I4 KA24EFWDAUTOMATICgas
5-Year Cost of Ownership
$36,140 maintenance + known platform issues
~$7,228/yr · 600¢/mile equivalent · $31,743 maintenance + $3,697 expected platform issues
Compare this engine
vs
3.0L V6 VG30E
vs
3.0L V6 VG30E
Common Problems & Known Issues

The 1992 Nissan Pickup (D21 platform) is legendarily durable but shows age-related weaknesses in transmission cooling, head gaskets on the V6, and timing chain components. The KA24E four-cylinder is nearly bulletproof; the VG30E V6 runs strong but has known gasket issues past 150k miles.

VG30E Head Gasket Failure (V6 models)

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 120,000-180,000 mi
Symptoms: white smoke from exhaust, coolant loss with no visible leak, overheating under load, milky oil on dipstick or cap
Fix: Both head gaskets typically need replacement simultaneously due to warp risk. Requires cylinder head removal, machining check, and new valve cover gaskets. Budget 12-16 hours labor plus machine shop time if heads need resurfacing.
Estimated cost: $1,800-3,200

Automatic Transmission Oil Cooler Line Failure

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 100,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: transmission fluid leaking at radiator, pink fluid in coolant reservoir, transmission overheating or slipping, radiator contamination causing milky ATF
Fix: The internal radiator cooler corrodes and cross-contaminates coolant and ATF, destroying the transmission if not caught early. Requires new radiator, external transmission cooler install, full fluid flush of both systems, and often transmission rebuild if mixing occurred. Prevention: install external cooler and bypass internal one. 8-10 hours labor if trans is OK, 20+ hours if rebuild needed.
Estimated cost: $800-1,200 (caught early), $2,500-4,000 (with transmission damage)

Timing Chain Rattle and Guide Wear

Occasional · medium severity
Typical onset: 150,000-200,000 mi
Symptoms: rattling from front of engine on cold start, noise disappears after 30 seconds as oil pressure builds, metallic ticking at idle
Fix: Timing chain stretches and plastic guides wear on both engines. KA24E is easier (10-12 hours), VG30E more involved (14-18 hours). Replace chain, guides, tensioner, and both timing chain gears. Oil pump inspection recommended while in there.
Estimated cost: $1,200-2,000 (KA24E), $1,600-2,600 (VG30E)

Fuel Tank and Sender Corrosion

Common · medium severity
Symptoms: fuel gauge reads empty when tank has fuel, erratic gauge movement, fuel smell under truck, visible rust on tank straps or tank bottom
Fix: Steel fuel tanks rust through in salt states or from sitting with ethanol fuel. Sending unit corrodes separately. Tank replacement requires dropping (3-4 hours), sender alone is 2 hours. Aftermarket tanks available but OE-style preferred for longevity.
Estimated cost: $400-700 (sender only), $800-1,400 (full tank replacement)

Throttle Body Idle Air Control Valve Failure

Occasional · low severity
Typical onset: 120,000-180,000 mi
Symptoms: erratic idle or stalling when warm, idle surges between 500-1200 RPM, stalls when coming to stop, rough idle that smooths with throttle input
Fix: The IACV solenoid carbons up or fails electrically. Cleaning with throttle body cleaner works temporarily; replacement is 1.5 hours labor. Sometimes the FICD (fast idle control device) also needs attention on the KA24E.
Estimated cost: $200-450

Rear Leaf Spring Shackle and Bushing Wear

Common · low severity
Typical onset: 100,000+ mi
Symptoms: clunking over bumps from rear, rear axle wander or steering instability, visible rust on shackles, cracked rubber bushings
Fix: Shackles rust and bushings dry-rot, especially on trucks that see loads or off-road use. Replace all four shackles and bushings as a set. Penetrating oil and heat often needed for seized bolts. 3-5 hours labor depending on rust severity.
Estimated cost: $400-800
Owner tips
  • Install an external transmission cooler immediately and bypass the internal radiator cooler—this single mod prevents the most catastrophic failure on these trucks
  • Use high-quality conventional 10W-30 or 10W-40 oil and change every 3,000-4,000 miles to preserve timing chain life; these engines predate modern oil standards
  • Inspect valve cover gaskets and oil pan gasket annually—leaks are common but cheap to fix before they cook wiring harnesses
  • If buying a V6 model, budget for head gaskets unless records prove recent replacement with quality parts
  • Undercoat the frame and inspect fuel tank annually in rust belt states—these are body-on-frame trucks that survive mechanically but rot structurally
Absolutely buy one used if it's a four-cylinder with service records and no rust—avoid V6 models unless head gaskets are already done or priced accordingly.
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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