1987 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS CIERA

173ci V6FWDAUTOMATICgas
5-Year Cost of Ownership
$27,921 maintenance + known platform issues
~$5,584/yr · 470¢/mile equivalent · $7,839 maintenance + $3,632 expected platform issues
Compare this engine
vs
3.3L V6
vs
2.5L I4
Common Problems & Known Issues

The 1987 Cutlass Ciera is a durable A-body platform car that runs forever if you maintain it, but the 2.8L V6 (173ci) has specific timing and intake issues, while the Iron Duke (151ci I4) is near-bulletproof but underpowered. Avoid the 4.3L diesel (263ci) entirely.

2.8L V6 Timing Chain Stretch and Gear Wear

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 80,000-140,000 mi
Symptoms: Rattling noise on cold start that fades as engine warms, Check engine light with timing-related codes, Rough idle and hesitation under acceleration, Metal shavings in oil, indicating nylon cam gear teeth breakage
Fix: Replace timing chain, gears (especially the nylon-toothed cam gear), and tensioner. Smart shops do the water pump and front seals while in there. 5-7 hours labor, parts run $150-250 for quality kit.
Estimated cost: $450-850

2.8L V6 Intake Manifold Gasket Failure

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 70,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: Coolant loss with no visible external leaks, White smoke from exhaust on startup, Rough idle and misfire codes, Oil contaminated with coolant (milky dipstick)
Fix: Lower intake gaskets leak coolant into the valley and cylinders. Requires intake removal, thorough cleaning, new gaskets and often new plenum gasket. 4-6 hours labor. Use Felpro permadry gaskets, not OEM paper.
Estimated cost: $350-650

THM-125C (3-speed Auto) Torque Converter Clutch Solenoid Failure

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 90,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: Shuddering or vibration at 40-50 mph during light throttle, Check engine light with TCC codes, Poor fuel economy (stays in unlock mode), Occasional stalling when coming to a stop
Fix: TCC solenoid or pressure switch fails in these transmissions. Often fixable without removal—drop pan, replace solenoid and filter, new fluid. 2-3 hours. Full rebuild if clutch material is burnt.
Estimated cost: $200-400 (solenoid) or $1,200-1,800 (rebuild)

Electronic Carburetor (E2SE/E2ME) Rochester Issues on V6

Occasional · medium severity
Symptoms: Hard starting when cold or hot, Stalling at idle or when coming off throttle, Surging at highway speeds, Black smoke and poor fuel economy
Fix: These feedback carbs are complex with mixture control solenoids and electronic chokes. Rebuild kits exist but most shops struggle with proper tuning. Many owners convert to a simple Holley 2-barrel or Weber. Rebuild: 3-4 hours. Conversion: 4-5 hours.
Estimated cost: $300-500 (rebuild) or $500-800 (Weber swap)

Front Strut Mount and Bearing Failure

Common · low severity
Typical onset: 60,000-100,000 mi
Symptoms: Clunking over bumps from front end, Steering wheel doesn't return to center smoothly, Creaking noise when turning steering wheel while stopped, Uneven tire wear on front tires
Fix: Upper strut mounts and bearings wear out, especially in rust-belt cars. Replace in pairs with struts if they're original. Mounts alone: 2 hours. Struts and mounts: 3-4 hours.
Estimated cost: $180-350 (mounts) or $450-700 (struts + mounts)

Brake Master Cylinder Slow Internal Leak

Occasional · high severity
Typical onset: 80,000-130,000 mi
Symptoms: Brake pedal slowly sinks to floor when holding at stop, Firm pedal on first press, soft on second, No external fluid leaks visible, Reservoir level drops slowly over weeks
Fix: Internal seals fail and fluid bypasses internally—classic Delco master cylinder issue. Replace master cylinder, bench bleed, and bleed entire system. 2-3 hours including bleed.
Estimated cost: $200-380

4.3L Diesel (263ci) - Catastrophic Everything

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 40,000-80,000 mi
Symptoms: Head gasket failure (every 40-60k miles), Injection pump failure, Cracked blocks and heads, Essentially any diesel-related problem you can imagine
Fix: This is GM's worst engine ever. Gasoline 350 small-block converted to diesel with inadequate block strength and head bolt count. Avoid completely or budget for 350 gas swap: 16-20 hours plus parts.
Estimated cost: $2,500-4,500 (engine swap to gas V6 or V8)
Owner tips
  • If buying a 2.8L V6, listen for timing chain rattle—it's a $600-800 repair you can negotiate with
  • Change coolant every 2 years religiously on the V6 to extend intake gasket life
  • The Iron Duke 2.5L (151ci) I4 is slow but virtually indestructible—best choice for reliability
  • Check for rust in rear wheel wells, trunk floor, and around windshield—these rust badly in salt states
  • THM-125C transmission is weak—service fluid every 30k and don't tow anything heavy
Buy the 4-cylinder version under 120k miles for $500-1000 and enjoy a 200k-mile appliance; avoid the diesel like the plague; budget $800 for timing/intake work on any V6.
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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