1987 PONTIAC GRAND AM

2.3L I4FWDMANUALgas
5-Year Cost of Ownership
$55,860 maintenance + known platform issues
~$11,172/yr · 930¢/mile equivalent · $32,383 maintenance + $5,527 expected platform issues
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2.2L I4
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2.4L I4
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3.4L V6
Common Problems & Known Issues

The 1987 Grand Am N-body platform is notorious for catastrophic engine failures, particularly in the 2.5L Iron Duke and 2.0L Turbo variants, with widespread connecting rod and main bearing failures that often grenade the entire bottom end before 100,000 miles. Transmission mounts also fail prematurely due to poor isolation design.

Catastrophic Connecting Rod and Main Bearing Failure

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 60,000-100,000 mi
Symptoms: severe knocking from engine bay, especially cold start, metallic rattling that worsens with RPM, sudden loss of oil pressure, engine seizure without warning
Fix: Complete engine rebuild or long block replacement required. Connecting rod bearings spin in the 2.5L Iron Duke and 2.0L Turbo due to marginal oil delivery and thin bearing material. Labor is 18-24 hours for rebuild, 12-16 hours for long block swap. Often discovered after catastrophic failure punches a hole in the block.
Estimated cost: $2,800-4,500

2.0L Turbo Head Gasket and Piston Ring Failure

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 50,000-80,000 mi
Symptoms: white smoke from exhaust, coolant consumption without visible leaks, oil consumption over 1 quart per 500 miles, rough idle and misfires, pressurized cooling system
Fix: The 2.0L turbo runs excessive cylinder pressures that blow head gaskets and crack ring lands. Requires head removal, resurfacing, and often a complete ring job or piston replacement. 16-20 hours labor. Many shops recommend full engine rebuild at this point given the bearing issues.
Estimated cost: $2,200-3,800

Transmission Mount Collapse

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 40,000-70,000 mi
Symptoms: severe clunking when shifting into Drive or Reverse, engine rocks excessively during acceleration, vibration felt through shifter and floor, transmission sits visibly lower on passenger side
Fix: The rubber transmission mount degrades rapidly due to heat from the catalytic converter proximity and oil contamination from leaking seals. Replacement is straightforward but requires supporting the transmission. 2-3 hours labor. Often masks or causes accelerated wear on CV joints.
Estimated cost: $180-320

Automatic Transmission 3T40 Valve Body Failure

Occasional · high severity
Typical onset: 80,000-130,000 mi
Symptoms: harsh or delayed shifts between gears, slipping in 2nd or 3rd gear, no upshift past 2nd gear, transmission stuck in one gear, burnt transmission fluid smell
Fix: The 3-speed 3T40 automatic develops valve body bore wear and accumulator piston seal failures. Often requires full rebuild as damage spreads to clutches and bands by the time symptoms appear. 10-14 hours for rebuild. Fluid changes help but rarely prevent this on high-mileage units.
Estimated cost: $1,400-2,200

Fuel System Varnish and Injector Clogging

Occasional · medium severity
Symptoms: hard starting when engine is hot, rough idle and stumbling, hesitation during acceleration, check engine light with lean codes, stalling at idle after warm-up
Fix: Early throttle-body and multi-port injection systems accumulate varnish from fuel additives of the era. Fuel filter clogs prematurely (replace every 15,000 miles). Injector cleaning or replacement needed. 3-5 hours for injector service and fuel system cleaning. Fuel pump failures also common at 60k-90k miles.
Estimated cost: $350-800

Crankshaft Position Sensor Failure (2.3L Quad 4 only)

Occasional · high severity
Typical onset: 70,000-110,000 mi
Symptoms: intermittent no-start condition, stalling while driving without warning, engine cranks but won't fire, fails when engine is hot, works when cool
Fix: The crank sensor on the Quad 4 fails due to heat cycles and vibration. Located behind the timing cover, requires timing cover removal. 4-6 hours labor. Always replace the cam sensor at the same time as preventive measure. Common failure leaves you stranded.
Estimated cost: $450-750
Owner tips
  • Change oil every 3,000 miles with high-quality oil (10W-30) to extend bearing life on 2.5L and 2.0L Turbo engines — this is critical, not optional
  • Replace fuel filter every 15,000 miles to prevent injector damage and fuel pump strain
  • Inspect transmission mount annually; replace at first sign of cracking or oil saturation
  • If buying a 2.0L Turbo, budget for an engine rebuild immediately — most are living on borrowed time
  • The 3.0L V6 is the most reliable engine option but still suffers intake gasket leaks
Hard pass unless free — these are rolling time bombs with catastrophic engine failure almost guaranteed, and any example cheap enough to consider has already been thrashed or is weeks from grenading.
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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