1967 BUICK LESABRE

350ci V8RWDAUTOMATICgas
5-Year Cost of Ownership
$10,809 maintenance + known platform issues
~$2,162/yr · 180¢/mile equivalent · $6,136 maintenance + $3,973 expected platform issues
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3.8L V6
Common Problems & Known Issues

The 1967 Buick LeSabre is a full-size luxury cruiser with the venerable Nailhead V8 (in 340, 400, or 430 variants) or the newer 300/350 V8, backed by a two-speed Super Turbine 300 or three-speed Super Turbine 400 automatic. Major issues revolve around aged transmission cooler systems, oil control problems in high-mileage engines, and carburetor tuning on original setups.

Transmission Oil Cooler Failure and Line Corrosion

Common · high severity
Typical onset: any mileage on original cooler
Symptoms: Transmission fluid in radiator or coolant in transmission pan, Pink or milky fluid on dipstick, Sudden transmission slip or no engagement after coolant contamination, External fluid weeping at steel cooler lines near frame rails
Fix: Replace external cooler or radiator if integral type; flush transmission thoroughly, replace filter and pan gasket, refill with Dexron. If contamination occurred, expect internal transmission damage requiring rebuild. Steel cooler lines rust through at bends—replace with pre-bent or NiCopp. 4-6 hours labor for cooler/lines; 12-16 hours if transmission rebuild needed.
Estimated cost: $600-1,200 for cooler and lines; $2,200-3,800 if transmission rebuild required

Nailhead V8 Oil Consumption and Ring Wear

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 80,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: Blue smoke on startup or acceleration, Using a quart of oil every 500-800 miles, Fouled spark plugs in one or more cylinders, Low cranking compression (under 120 psi)
Fix: Nailhead engines (340, 400, 430) have vertical valves and narrow piston ring lands that wear rapidly if oil changes were skipped. Requires full teardown, bore and hone (often .030 over), new pistons and rings, rod and main bearings, timing chain, and gaskets. Heads may need valve job. 18-24 hours labor for in-car short block rebuild; 26-32 hours for complete engine-out rebuild.
Estimated cost: $2,800-4,500 short block; $4,200-6,500 complete rebuild

Rochester Carburetor Flooding and Ethanol Damage

Common · medium severity
Symptoms: Fuel odor in garage or driveway after sitting, Hard starting when hot, Black smoke and rich running, Flooding over into intake manifold or air cleaner
Fix: Rochester 2GC or 4GC carbs have cork or rubber floats and old viton seals that fail with modern ethanol fuel. Rebuild with ethanol-compatible kit, set float level precisely, check needle and seat. If carburetor body is warped from heat, replacement may be necessary. 2-3 hours labor for on-car rebuild; budget for core replacement if body is damaged.
Estimated cost: $350-650 rebuild; $600-950 with replacement carburetor

Rear Main Seal Leak (Rope Type)

Occasional · low severity
Typical onset: any age, worsens over time
Symptoms: Oil puddle under back of engine after sitting, Wet bellhousing or transmission front face, Oil saturation on clutch (if manual, rare on LeSabre) or flywheel
Fix: Original rope-type rear main seals harden and shrink over decades. Can sometimes be replaced with engine in car by dropping oil pan and rear cap (tricky on Nailhead due to cap bolt access), but proper fix requires transmission removal. 6-8 hours labor in-car method; 10-12 hours if transmission must come out for access. Modern split-lip seals available but require machined groove in some cases.
Estimated cost: $650-1,100

Transmission Mount and Crossmember Deterioration

Common · medium severity
Symptoms: Clunk when shifting into drive or reverse, Vibration at idle in gear, Transmission tail shaft visibly sagging, Driveshaft angle excessive, causing U-joint binding
Fix: Rubber transmission mounts collapse after 50+ years; crossmember itself can rust or crack at mounting points on these full-frame cars. Replace mount and inspect crossmember for integrity; reinforce or replace if cracked. 1.5-2.5 hours labor if crossmember is sound; add 2-3 hours if welding or replacement needed.
Estimated cost: $220-450 mount only; $600-950 with crossmember work

Fuel Pump Pushrod Wear and Eccentric Damage

Occasional · medium severity
Typical onset: 100,000+ mi or after prolonged sitting
Symptoms: Fuel pump clicking or rattling noise, Loss of fuel pressure, engine starves at speed, New fuel pump fails repeatedly in short order
Fix: Mechanical fuel pump runs off an eccentric on the camshaft via a pushrod. Pushrod wears a groove or eccentric wears flat, causing weak or erratic pumping. Requires timing cover removal to inspect and replace pushrod and eccentric (if cam replacement not done). If caught early, pushrod replacement alone may suffice (2-3 hours); if eccentric is damaged, timing chain replacement and possibly cam work needed (8-12 hours).
Estimated cost: $350-600 pushrod only; $1,200-2,200 with timing set and eccentric
Owner tips
  • Run non-ethanol fuel if available or add stabilizer; old carbs and fuel lines deteriorate quickly with E10
  • Check transmission fluid for pink/milky color every oil change—early catch prevents catastrophic cooler failure damage
  • If buying, budget for an engine refresh if oil consumption is present; Nailheads are torquey and reliable once rebuilt properly
  • Inspect frame and crossmember rust thoroughly; Northern cars often have significant perimeter frame rot that affects mount integrity
Buy one if the engine doesn't smoke and the transmission shifts cleanly—plan for carburetor work and cooling system refresh, but these are solid, comfortable cruisers with affordable big-block V8 torque once sorted.
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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