1982 PONTIAC 6000

2.8L V6FWDAUTOMATICgas
5-Year Cost of Ownership
$37,980 maintenance + known platform issues
~$7,596/yr · 630¢/mile equivalent · $31,743 maintenance + $5,537 expected platform issues
Compare this engine
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2.5L I4
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3.1L V6
Common Problems & Known Issues

The 1982 Pontiac 6000 is a first-year A-body that suffers from transmission fragility, carburetor issues on the 2.8L V6, and premature engine wear on the Iron Duke 2.5L. These cars were GM's transitional platform and show it — lots of teething problems that led to heavy updates in '83 and beyond.

THM125C Automatic Transmission Failure

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 60,000-90,000 mi
Symptoms: slipping between gears especially 2nd-3rd, delayed engagement when shifting to Drive, whining noise from bellhousing area, burnt transmission fluid smell
Fix: The THM125C (transverse 3-speed auto) was notoriously weak in early A-bodies, especially behind the V6. Internal clutch packs fail, governor seals leak, and valve body bores wear. Rebuild requires 12-16 hours with complete teardown. Often need new torque converter, all clutches, and bands. Transmission mounts also fail frequently (add 1.5 hours), causing excessive movement and accelerating internal wear.
Estimated cost: $1,800-2,800

2.5L Iron Duke Excessive Oil Consumption and Bottom-End Failure

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 80,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: blue smoke on startup and acceleration, oil level drops 1 quart per 500-800 miles, rod knock or deep engine knock, loss of compression on one or more cylinders
Fix: The Tech IV 2.5L has weak piston rings and inadequate oil control from the factory. Rings collapse, leading to oil burning, then eventually rod bearing failure. Once knocking starts, you're looking at minimum short-block replacement (14-18 hours) or full rebuild with pistons, rings, bearings, and typically a crank polish. Many opt for junkyard long-block swap instead due to labor cost.
Estimated cost: $2,200-3,800

2.8L V6 Carburetor Rochester E2SE Problems

Common · medium severity
Symptoms: rough idle and stalling when warm, hesitation on acceleration, black smoke from exhaust, hard starting after sitting, poor fuel economy under 15 mpg
Fix: The E2SE (Electronic 2-barrel) carb is vacuum-nightmare technology. Mixture control solenoid fails, feedback system goes haywire, and internal passages clog. Rebuilding takes 4-6 hours if you know what you're doing, but most techs just replace with remanufactured unit (3 hours swap). Also check vacuum lines — they rot and cause false lean conditions.
Estimated cost: $450-900

Crankshaft Thrust Bearing Wear (All Engines)

Occasional · high severity
Typical onset: 90,000-140,000 mi
Symptoms: clutch pedal feels different or hard to engage (manual), grinding noise when releasing clutch, excessive crankshaft endplay measurable at harmonic balancer, metallic scraping on startup
Fix: GM transverse engines of this era had marginal thrust bearing design. Clutch riding or aggressive driving wears the center main thrust surface. Requires full engine teardown, crank removal, and machining or replacement (18-24 hours). Often discovered during other internal work. If caught early, sometimes oversized thrust washers work, but most need crank replacement or welding/machining.
Estimated cost: $2,800-4,200

Transmission Oil Cooler Line Corrosion and Leaks

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 70,000-110,000 mi
Symptoms: transmission fluid puddles under front of car, pink fluid visible along cooler lines, transmission overheating and slipping, low fluid level despite no visible pan leaks
Fix: Steel cooler lines rust through where they run along subframe, especially in salt states. Lines are cheap but replacement requires removing front fascia support and working around tight engine bay (3-4 hours). Leaking cooler lines starve the already-weak THM125C and cause catastrophic failure if ignored. Always replace both lines together and flush cooler.
Estimated cost: $350-600

Fuel System Vapor Lock and Filter Clogging

Occasional · medium severity
Symptoms: engine dies in hot weather after highway driving, stumbling and surging at steady cruise, won't restart until engine cools 20-30 minutes, intermittent fuel starvation feeling
Fix: Fuel lines routed too close to exhaust manifold cause vapor lock in warm climates. In-tank pump (if electric-equipped) also fails. Inline fuel filters clog from tank rust — replace every 15k miles (1 hour job). Vapor lock requires rerouting fuel lines away from heat or adding heat shield (2-3 hours custom work). Some guys add electric pusher pump as band-aid.
Estimated cost: $180-500
Owner tips
  • Change transmission fluid and filter every 30k miles religiously — the THM125C cannot tolerate neglect
  • On the 2.5L Iron Duke, use high-quality oil and change every 3k miles to slow ring wear; consider going to 10W-40 after 60k miles
  • Inspect transmission mounts every oil change — they fail frequently and destroy the transmission when collapsed
  • Replace fuel filter annually regardless of mileage, and use fuel stabilizer if car sits for weeks at a time
  • Check crankshaft endplay if you hear any clutch-area grinding — catching thrust bearing wear early saves the crank
Hard pass unless you're getting it free — these first-year A-bodies are parts cars today, with transmission and engine failures that exceed the vehicle's value by 50-200%.
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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