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NOISY LUCERNE CX disappointing


LucerneOwner

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I recently bought a Lucerne CX, believing quality/luxury equate to QUIET, and buying into the QUIET-TUNING hype – although it’s indeed quiet on the highway, I am disappointed that it is not nearly as quiet in stop/go city driving as my previous 1999 LeSabre Ltd – the CX has poor engine noise isolation & annoying drive train shudder/growl under startup acceleration conditions - dealer improved situation by replacing one engine mount (defective design) & realigning engine to mounts, but engine noise isolation still not acceptable - wind/road noise isolation good, but 2 out of 3 not good enough. Is there ANY way I can get better engine noise isolation? I'd be willing to pay for custom service in this regard, because I like the car otherwise, but no one seems to have a solution. Dealer apparently has done all he can ... he can only act on info (technical bulletins) that Buick gives him, and he's ALREADY done that.

UPDATE (April 6, 2007) - See post #55 of this Topic - PROBLEM FINALLY SOLVED!!!

Edited by LucerneOwner
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My father has a Lucerne CX and I've driven it a few times: it's so quiet I couldn't tell it was running from inside. Quiet Tuning is not 'hype'.

Understand your frustration, but it sounds like an assembly error or defective part- the former something a TSB would not be addressing. It's not something anyone who hasn't had the problem & resolved it is going to be able to make a suggestion about.

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My father has a Lucerne CX and I've driven it a few times: it's so quiet I couldn't tell it was running from inside. Quiet Tuning is not 'hype'.

Understand your frustration, but it sounds like an assembly error or defective part- the former something a TSB would not be addressing. It's not something anyone who hasn't had the problem & resolved it is going to be able to make a suggestion about.

Your experience is puzzling to me. I've been reading elsewhere in this C&G forum and find that frequent visitor Sajeev Mehta has hit the nail on the head regarding the noisy/growly/gruff Lucerne engine under acceleration. He seems to have angered a lot of other visitors with his criticisms and comparison of engine noise in the Lexus ES vs Lucerne, but I find his conclusion valid that you can't legitimately claim QUIET-TUNING in a Lucerne unless you get better engine noise isolation. My dealer is aware of the problem, but has not been able to make significant improvement other than by replacing a so called defectively designed engine mount (just 1 ???) and realigning the engine to all 4 mounts (separate visit). I'm beginning to feel the problem is endemic to the DTS chassis, inasmuch as I have experienced it in 2 rental Lucernes, and inasmuch as DTS Cadillacs are also accused of having engine noise problems, and inasmuch as the same (?) Buick V6 was in my 1999 LeSabre Ltd, which had the quietest engine (under acceleration) of any car I've ever owned. So, it would seem with the DTS chassis that one needs a extra measure of effort that Buick has not given to isolate engine noise/vibration from the cabin.

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I own a Park Avenue which shares this platform and uses the SC3800. I have experienced no such issue. I've driven the Lucerne and ES350. I do not find the Lucerne louder than the ES350. The article you are referring to by Sajeev Mehta was posted on C&G last year. You commented on this issue in that topic and it was discussed in that topic. Is there a particular reason you wish to discuss this issue again after all these months? As much as I appreciate your enthusiasm over the Lucerne, I can't help but notice that all six of your posts on C&G are nearly identical. It sounds like your particular Lucerne has a problem. I'm sorry that your dealer has been unable to resolve it, but exaggerating the issue and alluding to it now being a "chassis" issue universally impacting all G-platform vehicles is an absurd conclusion. I do not see your problem as an engineering flaw. It sounds like there is a part (or parts) that may be defective and may need a more knowledgeable dealer to examine it. I want your experience with the Lucerne to be positive, but you've owned it for about eight months now. I would move your Lucerne's issue up on the priority list and take it elsewhere to be inspected.

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I own a Park Avenue which shares this platform and uses the SC3800. I have experienced no such issue. I've driven the Lucerne and ES350. I do not find the Lucerne louder than the ES350. The article you are referring to by Sajeev Mehta was posted on C&G last year. You commented on this issue in that topic and it was discussed in that topic. Is there a particular reason you wish to discuss this issue again after all these months? As much as I appreciate your enthusiasm over the Lucerne, I can't help but notice that all six of your posts on C&G are nearly identical. It sounds like your particular Lucerne has a problem. I'm sorry that your dealer has been unable to resolve it, but exaggerating the issue and alluding to it now being a "chassis" issue universally impacting all G-platform vehicles is an absurd conclusion. I do not see your problem as an engineering flaw. It sounds like there is a part (or parts) that may be defective and may need a more knowledgeable dealer to examine it. I want your experience with the Lucerne to be positive, but you've owned it for about eight months now. I would move your Lucerne's issue up on the priority list and take it elsewhere to be inspected.

Thanks for your comments. I bring up this issue again only because I'm hoping eventually to stumble upon someone here besides Sajeev Mehta who has experienced and understands my same problem and, even better, has a suggested solution. Inasmuch as my dealer can't seem to help further, I don't know what else to do. They're ordinarily pretty good, and my family has been with them many years, so I have no particular reason to believe I would get better service elsewhere, and I wouldn't have any idea where that might be. Maybe I'll give them one more chance. Sigh! At this point, I'm pretty much disillusioned with Buick, worn down, and an unhappy camper. This will probably end up being my last Buick. Now, I just wish I could have a new 1999 LeSabre Ltd, like my last one. That would make me a happy camper.

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[email protected]

Send Uncle Bob an email.

Make sure it's nice and professional. Give him your best description of the problem, and describe evrything you have tried to correct this problem. Make sure to mention that this could be your last Buick, and you wish it was just as reliable and satisfactory as your LeSabre.

Who knows if he will respond, and what he will say or do if he does, but it's just another outlet for you to voice your complaints. GM needs all the satisfied customers they can get, and if you aren't satisfied, they should hear about it.

That... or if worse comes to worse, you and the Lucerne can drive to Detroit and have the head office hear it for themselves. :AH-HA_wink:

Good Luck. :thumbsup:

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[email protected]

Send Uncle Bob an email.

Make sure it's nice and professional. Give him your best description of the problem, and describe evrything you have tried to correct this problem. Make sure to mention that this could be your last Buick, and you wish it was just as reliable and satisfactory as your LeSabre.

Who knows if he will respond, and what he will say or do if he does, but it's just another outlet for you to voice your complaints. GM needs all the satisfied customers they can get, and if you aren't satisfied, they should hear about it.

That... or if worse comes to worse, you and the Lucerne can drive to Detroit and have the head office hear it for themselves. :AH-HA_wink:

Good Luck. :thumbsup:

Thanks, maybe I'll write to Bob Lutz after giving my dealer one more chance. It's strange, though, that more complaints like mine haven't surfaced in this Forum, as I've read similar complaints on other web sites. The road test reviewer for CR, for instance, lists the "coarse engine" as one of the "low points" for the Lucerne and sez the "V6 is rough and sounds harsh when pushed", altho he indicates it is "unobtrusive". Maybe so, for most people, but that is a subjective matter. For someone like me, for whom silence is so very golden and who was spoiled by the extraordinary silence of my previous 1999 LeSabre Ltd, this gruff engine is not so unobtrusive. For me it's very annoying. Another reviewer said the engine makes the Lucerne sound like a generic airport rental sedan, which may be an overstatement, but I read in all of this that my situation is NOT unique and may well be endemic to the car itself, just not a point of contention for non-perfectionists and those not spoiled by previous experience.

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Bob Lutz isn't going to take care of the problem. If the dealer can't fix it, contact Buick costumer service and make them do something about the problem.

Thanks, I've done that, and their canned answer was, "We here at the Customer Assistance Center are not able, nor equipped to make any specific or conclusive diagnosis over the internet as to how your engine's volume can be decreased. It is for this reason that we rely heavily on the Service Staff at Buick dealerships to provide our customers with any type of mechanical diagnosis .....". In other words, there is no such thing as corporate customer service. As mentioned earlier, I've gone the dealership service route, with limited success, but will try once more. I'm very disappointed in this cop-out from BUICK.COM ... you'd think they could run this by their R&D/design experts and/or the people at Buick who create/issue the Technical Service Bulletins to the dealerships.

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The road test reviewer for CR, for instance, lists the "coarse engine" as one of the "low points" for the Lucerne and sez the "V6 is rough and sounds harsh when pushed", altho he indicates it is "unobtrusive".

That is CR's way of saying "Pushrods suck". Keep in mind that the method's that CR uses to test cars...especially domestic cars...is not going to be anything remotely similar to normal driving.

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>>"That is CR's way of saying "Pushrods suck". "<<

It; in a nutshell. Go check on what they said about your '99, that was undoubtedly "coarse" also.

Northstar has the best advice IMO; contact the regional service manager. And for your 'final' service visit, take your car to another dealership- obviously a Cadillac store is also a possibility. Sometimes a different set of eyes finds the problem right off.

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That is CR's way of saying "Pushrods suck". Keep in mind that the method's that CR uses to test cars...especially domestic cars...is not going to be anything remotely similar to normal driving.

.... and yet I find their assessments of pros and cons to be pretty much in line with those of my own experience as a conservative driver (average 24.3 MPG, 1st 8000 miles, balanced city/highway), so why do you judge them so harshly?

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.... and yet I find their assessments of pros and cons to be pretty much in line with those of my own experience as a conservative driver (average 24.3 MPG, 1st 8000 miles, balanced city/highway), so why do you judge them so harshly?

They have a history of favoring foreign brands over domestic ones...... even when the cars come off the same assembly line. When one displays bias like that it is hard to deem the rest of the information as reliable.

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They have a history of favoring foreign brands over domestic ones...... even when the cars come off the same assembly line. When one displays bias like that it is hard to deem the rest of the information as reliable.

I haven't kept up with CR's reviews over the years, but I wouldn't be surprised that they favored certain foreign brands, especially Toyota/Lexus. My take on the domestic car industry is that they became complacent, uncompetitive and unresponsive to the public's needs & desires. Finally they got the message and some domestics have made significant strides getting back into the game, but the stiff competition is still there. I can't find online what CR had to say about my old 1999 LeSabre. I'm pretty sure they wouldn't have liked the wallowy ride or handling, but that is of little consequence to me, as handling is not an issue for a very conservative driver like me. For me, silence is golden, and I can't imagine CR would have anything disparaging to say about engine noise in the 1999 .... maybe high speed wind noise, but not low speed engine noise, even under acceleration. it was, simply, an amazing car in that respect, as my friends who rode in it can attest, so it is most disappointing to me that Buick took a step backwards in this one respect.

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I haven't kept up with CR's reviews over the years, but I wouldn't be surprised that they favored certain foreign brands, especially Toyota/Lexus. My take on the domestic car industry is that they became complacent, uncompetitive and unresponsive to the public's needs & desires. Finally they got the message and some domestics have made significant strides getting back into the game, but the stiff competition is still there. I can't find online what CR had to say about my old 1999 LeSabre. I'm pretty sure they wouldn't have liked the wallowy ride or handling, but that is of little consequence to me, as handling is not an issue for a very conservative driver like me. For me, silence is golden, and I can't imagine CR would have anything disparaging to say about engine noise in the 1999 .... maybe high speed wind noise, but not low speed engine noise, even under acceleration. it was, simply, an amazing car in that respect, as my friends who rode in it can attest, so it is most disappointing to me that Buick took a step backwards in this one respect.

I think I'm with the rest of the forum who has posted here that you got a bum ride. Call Buick's regional manager and take it to a different dealer.

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.... and yet I find their assessments of pros and cons to be pretty much in line with those of my own experience as a conservative driver (average 24.3 MPG, 1st 8000 miles, balanced city/highway), so why do you judge them so harshly?

Because they are bias and unfair in their tests.

Consumer Reports: Child seat test faulty

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Because they are bias and unfair in their tests.

Consumer Reports: Child seat test faulty

I loved my friends' reactions when I showed them that article as they rely heavily on CR for their purchases.
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I have driven several Lucerne 3800's and have had a lot of experience with G-body LeSabres and Park Aves and the older 90's H-body LeSabres and Bonnevilles. When comparing the H-body cars like the Bonneville and LeSabre, I did find that the Buick and Olds versions were quieter overall due to different exhaust tuning. GM also investing some money into the 3800 during the 1999 model year with new heads and injectors that resulted in a smoother and lower idle and noticeably quieter operation. The raspiness of the 95-early 99 3800's gave way to a muted moan that was more pleasing to the ears. Fast forward to the G-body LeSabre/Park Ave. My 2000 LeSabre did exhibit a slight shudder and roughness when first accelerating but was smooth thereafter. A few 2001-2002 Park Aves didn't seem to do this. I had a 2005 LeSabre for a rental and it was easily the smoothest and quietest of the 3800 G-bodies I have driven. No shudder or roughness at all. Imagine my surprise then when all 3 Lucernes I test drove had what I can only describe as untypical 3800 noise. They all exhibited the off idle shudder, were noisy when floored and had raspy sounding exhausts with the car in park, drivers door open and foot nudging the gas pedal revving the engine. This leaves me to believe that the exhaust design on this car is definately one factor in the dissapointing amount of noise this engine exhibits along with the engine mount design. It is a known fact that Buick V6 engines are very sensative and partial to good motor mount design. The old carbed Buick 3.8(231 CID) V6's of the 80's were notorious for killing motor mounts. Litterally every one I drove or owned or sold through our old dealership had a broken drivers side engine mount which caused a major shudder as the engine lifted upon accelleration. Napa made an aftermarket hard rubber replacement mount that made a big difference in the way this engine felt when driving and accelerating. The carbed 3.0 liter V6 from 1982-1985 in the front drive cars required a special mounting system to obtain an acceptable smoothness compared to the Chevy 60 degree 2.8 of the same era. Not that we can really compare todays 3800 Series III to the old carbed V6's but it is interesting to note that even though this engine has been totally revamped compared to that time era, it still suffers if the mounting setup and exhausts aren't perfectly setup. I would definately pursue the exhaust and mounting system in your Lucerne and possibly take it to several different dealers until an acceptable remedy is reached.

Edited by ponchoman49
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Something tells I need to pay the "troll" before crossing the bridge.

Exactly. Seems like it to me, my apologies if I am mistaken.

Edited by Sixty8panther
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I have driven several Lucerne 3800's and have had a lot of experience with G-body LeSabres and Park Aves and the older 90's H-body LeSabres and Bonnevilles. When comparing the H-body cars like the Bonneville and LeSabre, I did find that the Buick and Olds versions were quieter overall due to different exhaust tuning. GM also investing some money into the 3800 during the 1999 model year with new heads and injectors that resulted in a smoother and lower idle and noticeably quieter operation. The raspiness of the 95-early 99 3800's gave way to a muted moan that was more pleasing to the ears. Fast forward to the G-body LeSabre/Park Ave. My 2000 LeSabre did exhibit a slight shudder and roughness when first accelerating but was smooth thereafter. A few 2001-2002 Park Aves didn't seem to do this. I had a 2005 LeSabre for a rental and it was easily the smoothest and quietest of the 3800 G-bodies I have driven. No shudder or roughness at all. Imagine my surprise then when all 3 Lucernes I test drove had what I can only describe as untypical 3800 noise. They all exhibited the off idle shudder, were noisy when floored and had raspy sounding exhausts with the car in park, drivers door open and foot nudging the gas pedal revving the engine. This leaves me to believe that the exhaust design on this car is definately one factor in the dissapointing amount of noise this engine exhibits along with the engine mount design. It is a known fact that Buick V6 engines are very sensative and partial to good motor mount design. The old carbed Buick 3.8(231 CID) V6's of the 80's were notorious for killing motor mounts. Litterally every one I drove or owned or sold through our old dealership had a broken drivers side engine mount which caused a major shudder as the engine lifted upon accelleration. Napa made an aftermarket hard rubber replacement mount that made a big difference in the way this engine felt when driving and accelerating. The carbed 3.0 liter V6 from 1982-1985 in the front drive cars required a special mounting system to obtain an acceptable smoothness compared to the Chevy 60 degree 2.8 of the same era. Not that we can really compare todays 3800 Series III to the old carbed V6's but it is interesting to note that even though this engine has been totally revamped compared to that time era, it still suffers if the mounting setup and exhausts aren't perfectly setup. I would definately pursue the exhaust and mounting system in your Lucerne and possibly take it to several different dealers until an acceptable remedy is reached.

This Ponchoman49 post is an amazing revelation that corroborates EXACTLY my experience with engines in my quiet/smooth (late model year) 1999 LeSabre Ltd & noisy/gruff (early model year) 2006 Lucerne CX. Thank you! Thank you! I had hoped that, if I persisted long enuf on this Forum, someone knowledgable would come along and illuminate this most disappointing aspect of my Lucerne CX. I will copy/print this info and take it with me to my next service appointment. I think the dealer may learn something from this which will hopefully enable him to mitigate the problem(s). I think he was on the right track when he followed TSB protocol and replaced 1 engine mount (he said orig DESIGN was defective) and then used a procedure to allow the engine to "self-align" itself to all 4 mounts to minimize mounting stress. That partially corrected the annoying brief buzz/vibration accelerating from zero, but not the general noise level under acceleration at other speeds. However, I don't believe the exhaust system has yet been addressed. QUESTION: Do you know of any current aftermarket components (like that NAPA hard rubber engine mount or exhaust components) that would help my situation now? That might be very helpful, although the dealer might tell me my warranty would be voided. Thanks again!

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Have you considered ear-plugs, or those fancy noise-cancelling headphones?

It seems like you don't want to hear ANYTHING when you drive.

You're CLOSE! I don't want to hear anything from the car itself (or wind or road). Ideally, I would like to have utter silence, except for music from the CD or radio, or quiet conversation.

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Lexus LS Hybrid.

Pretty good choice, but too pricey for me. I think, if I can get this excesssive engine noise/vibration in my LUCERNE CX rectified, that I will have perhaps the finest luxury sedan for the money in the world. I put on W/W Goodyear ComforTreds (quieter/smoother than orig Bridgestones), which not only dress it up spiffy, but make it sportier-looking ... give the APPEARANCE of 19" wheels while still retaining the softer ride of its 16" wheels. The car is that metallic sand color ... can't remember what they call it. You like Meryl Streep? I like Meryl Streep. Cheers!

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Pretty good choice, but too pricey for me. I think, if I can get this excesssive engine noise/vibration in my LUCERNE CX rectified, that I will have perhaps the finest luxury sedan for the money in the world. I put on W/W Goodyear ComforTreds (quieter/smoother than orig Bridgestones), which not only dress it up spiffy, but make it sportier-looking ... give the APPEARANCE of 19" wheels while still retaining the softer ride of its 16" wheels. The car is that metallic sand color ... can't remember what they call it. You like Meryl Streep? I like Meryl Streep. Cheers!

If it was smoothness and quietness you were after, I could have spent the extra 3 grand for the Northstar. Even at it's current age it's still one of the smoothest on the market.

I like Meryl Streep's character. I'm going through a messy divorce and she <Miranda, the character Meryl plays> is kind of my hero right now.

Edited by Oldsmoboi
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Did you test drive the car before you bought it? Did the Lucerne you test drove do this or is this something exceptional to your car?

I'm ashamed to say I don't think I was paying close enuf attention in my test drive, and didn't wring it out thoroughly enuf. I may have been distracted by the salesman and my wife being in the car with me, and the newness of the car. Also, I was focussed on the alleged reduction in wind noise in the QUIET-TUNING hype, since that was the primary source of noise in my 1999 LeSabre. I was impressed. Because engine noise was not an issue in the 1999, I guess it never occurred to me that it might be in the Lucerne, and kinda tuned out that possibility. I don't know for sure ... the old memory is fading now. I do know that the 2 subsequent Lucerne rentals I had (during servicing of mine) had the engine problem, but by then I was looking for it. And now we know all 3 Lucernes that Panchoman49 tested and that Sajeev Mehta tested (and that CR tested) had the engine noise/vibration discussed here. My suspicion is that many/most Lucernes have this problem (except maybe when the planets align), but that many people don't notice or care. I've even come across several people on these web Forums who LIKE a growly sound coming from under the hood ... a macho thing, I guess. There may not be many persnickety folks, like me, for whom SILENCE is so very golden, and/or who were previously spoiled by a super-quiet engine like the (late model year) 1999 LeSabre, as described by Panchoman49.

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Imagine my surprise then when all 3 Lucernes I test drove had what I can only describe as untypical 3800 noise. They all exhibited the off idle shudder, were noisy when floored and had raspy sounding exhausts with the car in park, drivers door open and foot nudging the gas pedal revving the engine.

Yes, same with me too! We once had a new 2002 LeSabre Custom rental for a month while our 300M was being rebuilt, and that car was one of the smoothest, quietest, and most solid feeling vehicles we ever had--and it impressed us enough to actually plan on trading the 300M for one after we got it back. We didn't, but years later this past summer we considered a Lucerne as a gas saving measure. Being familiar with the platform and also the 3.8L, I expected the same level of refinement and solidity but taken to an even higher level and with a massively better interior.

The style and interior were out of this world in comparison to the LeSabre, but the weirdest thing of all--the 3.8L was actually quite loud and very growly in comparison to any other vehicle I had experienced it in. Cruising, it was fine, but I'd take off from a stop and it was just a growly roar that you could feel and hear, and it didn't fall into the category of a pleasant sound by any means--it sounded like an old GM car with a worn exhaust, but only really from a stop. Same thing with another CXL V6 we drove later in the week, though it was a tad quieter and didn't strike me as much.

So, it's definitely something weird, especially now that I've seen other people experience the same thing. Generally, it always had a bit of growl just due to nature, but even in cars like the LeSabre it generally seemed smoother and quieter somehow. Then again, not everyone is having this reaction to 3.8L Lucernes, so it very likely is just a semi common build issue, whether it be mounts, exhaust, or what have you. The first car in question also had a nasty front end vibration at certain speeds, which IS a common hit or miss G-body issue (and still ongoing ever since '95, in a variety of them), so who knows.

Still love the car, and probably would stick to a 3.8L if I bought one for the great gas mileage, but I'd be curious to check out more examples to compare the noise.

Edited by caddycruiser
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Two things:

How is the sound in comparison to the LaCrosse? I mean, it's the same engine.. is there the same problem with sound and harshness?

Also, is it possible that the car is so quiet, that now the engine's growl is more evident?

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Thanks for your comments. I bring up this issue again only because I'm hoping eventually to stumble upon someone here besides Sajeev Mehta who has experienced and understands my same problem and, even better, has a suggested solution.

Actually I drove the Northstar powered Lucerne, it was quiet everywhere except for the intake growl. I liked it, but it didn't go with the whole Quiet Tuning thing. I can see why you might not like the 3.8L version.

Odds are whatever the dealer did is about all you can expect.

I don't know the differences between this 3.8L and the one in your old LeSabre, but its a 90 degree V6, which is an inherently unbalanced engine design. Combined with the extra weight (?) of the Lucerne, maybe the 3.8L is overworked? That's my only explanation, seems to be the case for the Ford Five Hundred too. Its motor was a lot smoother in the old Taurus.

On a side note: its pretty cool how I bitched about the Lexus ES 350 being noisy (everywhere but the engine) and I get a loyal following at the Club Lexus forums of pissed off owners ready to jump ship. It was only a matter of time before someone else thought the Buick's engine noise was not becoming of Quiet Tuning. :AH-HA_wink:

Edited by Sajeev Mehta
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Two things:

How is the sound in comparison to the LaCrosse? I mean, it's the same engine.. is there the same problem with sound and harshness?

Also, is it possible that the car is so quiet, that now the engine's growl is more evident?

Don't know about the LaCrosse. Road/wind noise (& therefore QUIET-TUNING) isn't an issue at low speeds where the noticable Lucerne V6 growl accelerating from zero occurs. On the other hand, when accelerating at higher speeds, or downshifting on mountain upgrades at highway speeds, the loud engine/exhaust noise might be masked better prior to Q-T of those 2 noise sources. Even so, there's no question in my mind that the Lucerne has much more engine noise under load and/or accelerating at higher speeds than did my 1999 LeSabre. My friends and I used to marvel how unobtrusively the 1999 would downshift on Arizona mountain upgrades -- we would barely be aware of it because the transmission was so silky-smooth and the engine so quiet. If I understand Ponchoman49 correctly, this higher speed engine noise in an accelerating Lucerne probably has more to do with the exhaust system than the engine mounts.

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The first car in question also had a nasty front end vibration at certain speeds, which IS a common hit or miss G-body issue (and still ongoing ever since '95, in a variety of them), so who knows.

All G-bodies have this front-end vibration, something I believe is inherent to the structural frequency of the car. I've driven a few G- and K-bodes aside from having two in the household and all of them are affected by this to varying degrees. From experience, a 2005 DeVille I rented shook between 85-90mph. My Aurora does this between 75-85mph, but milder with acceleration. Our 2000 Bonneville did this from 65-80mph being rather detectable at ~70mph, but after its accident and frame-rework, it now only does this mildly between 85-95mph, mildly like my Olds. Above 100mph, all these cars are absolutely smooth as silk...

...or, you know...so I've heard... :unsure:

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All G-bodies have this front-end vibration, something I believe is inherent to the structural frequency of the car. I've driven a few G- and K-bodes aside from having two in the household and all of them are affected by this to varying degrees. From experience, a 2005 DeVille I rented shook between 85-90mph. My Aurora does this between 75-85mph, but milder with acceleration. Our 2000 Bonneville did this from 65-80mph being rather detectable at ~70mph, but after its accident and frame-rework, it now only does this mildly between 85-95mph, mildly like my Olds. Above 100mph, all these cars are absolutely smooth as silk...

...or, you know...so I've heard... :unsure:

I'll even admit that I do experience some minor front-end vibration at particular speeds (I can feel it through the steering wheel)... but it appears around the time I need to rotate my tires. That seems to make it disappear for 6-8 months and then becomes noticeable again. I originally thought it was a weather/ seasonal issue (being very cold etc...), but I finally linked it to rotating my tires. As a note of interest, every time I've rotated my tires, they've required rebalancing.

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I'm ashamed to say I don't think I was paying close enuf attention in my test drive, and didn't wring it out thoroughly enuf. I may have been distracted by the salesman and my wife being in the car with me, and the newness of the car. Also, I was focussed on the alleged reduction in wind noise in the QUIET-TUNING hype, since that was the primary source of noise in my 1999 LeSabre. I was impressed. Because engine noise was not an issue in the 1999, I guess it never occurred to me that it might be in the Lucerne, and kinda tuned out that possibility. I don't know for sure ... the old memory is fading now. I do know that the 2 subsequent Lucerne rentals I had (during servicing of mine) had the engine problem, but by then I was looking for it. And now we know all 3 Lucernes that Panchoman49 tested and that Sajeev Mehta tested (and that CR tested) had the engine noise/vibration discussed here. My suspicion is that many/most Lucernes have this problem (except maybe when the planets align), but that many people don't notice or care. I've even come across several people on these web Forums who LIKE a growly sound coming from under the hood ... a macho thing, I guess. There may not be many persnickety folks, like me, for whom SILENCE is so very golden, and/or who were previously spoiled by a super-quiet engine like the (late model year) 1999 LeSabre, as described by Panchoman49.

I'm sorry but how can you not notice something or not pay attention to an aspect of the car you feel is important? You're putting down 20+ grand on a car you should pay attention to every aspect of it so you know you bought the right car...it just sounds like excuses to me..especially " ... the old memory is fading now"..are you like 90?

As far as tomb-like silence...why? It's nice to hear an engine if it sounds good...it also lets you know the car is alive and you're driving more than an appliance. Of course there's a difference between refined and raspy.

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As far as tomb-like silence...why? It's nice to hear an engine if it sounds good...it also lets you know the car is alive and you're driving more than an appliance. Of course there's a difference between refined and raspy.

Really. If I couldn't hear my engine, I'd go bonkers.
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I'm sorry but how can you not notice something or not pay attention to an aspect of the car you feel is important? You're putting down 20+ grand on a car you should pay attention to every aspect of it ....

I already explained that ... distractions plus my focus on hopeful remediation of residual problems in my 1999 (wind/road/etc). It never occurred to me that Buick would take a step backward from having already solved engine noise so beautifully in the 1999 LeSabre, but I still fault myself for missing it. Keep in mind we're talking somewhat subtle effects here, altho very annoying once one's attention becomes focussed solely on them. As far as memory/mind degrading with age, come back when you're 70 or so and tell me you're just as sharp as you are now. Not all of us would be so lucky.

As far as tomb-like silence...why? It's nice to hear an engine if it sounds good...it also lets you know the car is alive and you're driving more than an appliance. Of course there's a difference between refined and raspy.

Exactly, plus my priorities & viewpoint are just different. To me silence is golden and is the essence of quality & luxury feeling in a car. i don't like to hear an engine even if it does sound good, whatever that means, and I certainly don't need noise to tell me the car is alive ... I see movement outside and I feel power/acceleration.

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I think several factors are playing in on the excessive noise of the 3800 Lucerne. The G-body in general as others have stated does have a tendancy to vibrate at certain speeds. Litterally every one of them seems to do it at one speed or another. This tells me that the G-body resonates a bad frequency when either a certain speed is reached or a certain engine RPM is met. Buick V6's have an off idle roughness due to there 90 degree nature and old design. Balance shafts were introduced for the 1988 model year to help curb this. But we must remember that the old H-body LeSabres/Deltas has much lower body/frame stiffness and thus absorbed what vibration was left from the 3800 motor. This is why I firmly believe the current super stiff G-body needs very special attention to engine/transmission mounts, exhaust routing and muffler decibels. There is also the curiosity of the 2006-2007 Lucerne version of the 3800. It is now in Series III guise yet puts out 3 less Hp than the smaller LaCrosse/GP at 197 and 3 less torque also at 227. It is even worse when compared to the 1995-2005 Series II version of this engine which made 205 HP and 230 torque. The Lucerne weights in at nearly 3800 lbs in base CX form and 3900 or so with the CXL trim. The only axle used with the Lucerne is the lazy 2.86:1 gear which is there to help offset the extra 300-400 lbs of weight for highway mileage. Getting off the line is going to be tougher for a less powerful engine with lazy gears in a heavy full size sedan which is going to increase noise some. The Lucerne is geared for an ultra quiet interior with very low wind noise and road noise. The one negative aspect of this is that the old 3800 is going to be heard much easier than before over the serenity of the cabin hush. At a guess and hunch, I would be willing to bet that GM skimped a bit on the total quiet tuning thing with the Lucerne to keep the base price under 26K for it's introduction in 2006 with common parts bin exhaust systems and engine/tranny mounts but I could be wrong on some of that. I can confirm however that the Lucernes exhaust is louder than my 2000 LeSabre and any older 90's LeSabres/88's when you are outside of the car and the engine is revved up. It has a more sporty snap to it which goes against the whole quiet tuning thing. Perhaps a visit to the muffler shop wouldn't hurt to see if a quieter exhaust system is offered. I would also keep pestering GM about this. They have a tendancy to usher in improvements in the middle and end of a given cars production run to try and cut down on customer dissatisfaction/complaints. The 3 Lucernes I drove were all 2006 models. I have yet to try out a 2007 or soon to be 2008 to see if the problem is any different. Of course the easiest fix would have been to offer the 3.6 liter DOHC V6 as in the LaCrosse CSX. That engine in any body I have driven is a marvel for smoothness and quietness that rivals the best from overseas but thats GM for ya!

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I think several factors are playing in on the excessive noise of the 3800 Lucerne. The G-body in general as others have stated does have a tendancy to vibrate at certain speeds. Litterally every one of them seems to do it at one speed or another. This tells me that the G-body resonates a bad frequency when either a certain speed is reached or a certain engine RPM is met. Buick V6's have an off idle roughness due to there 90 degree nature and old design. Balance shafts were introduced for the 1988 model year to help curb this. But we must remember that the old H-body LeSabres/Deltas has much lower body/frame stiffness and thus absorbed what vibration was left from the 3800 motor. This is why I firmly believe the current super stiff G-body needs very special attention to engine/transmission mounts, exhaust routing and muffler decibels. There is also the curiosity of the 2006-2007 Lucerne version of the 3800. It is now in Series III guise yet puts out 3 less Hp than the smaller LaCrosse/GP at 197 and 3 less torque also at 227. It is even worse when compared to the 1995-2005 Series II version of this engine which made 205 HP and 230 torque. The Lucerne weights in at nearly 3800 lbs in base CX form and 3900 or so with the CXL trim. The only axle used with the Lucerne is the lazy 2.86:1 gear which is there to help offset the extra 300-400 lbs of weight for highway mileage. Getting off the line is going to be tougher for a less powerful engine with lazy gears in a heavy full size sedan which is going to increase noise some. The Lucerne is geared for an ultra quiet interior with very low wind noise and road noise. The one negative aspect of this is that the old 3800 is going to be heard much easier than before over the serenity of the cabin hush. At a guess and hunch, I would be willing to bet that GM skimped a bit on the total quiet tuning thing with the Lucerne to keep the base price under 26K for it's introduction in 2006 with common parts bin exhaust systems and engine/tranny mounts but I could be wrong on some of that. I can confirm however that the Lucernes exhaust is louder than my 2000 LeSabre and any older 90's LeSabres/88's when you are outside of the car and the engine is revved up. It has a more sporty snap to it which goes against the whole quiet tuning thing. Perhaps a visit to the muffler shop wouldn't hurt to see if a quieter exhaust system is offered. I would also keep pestering GM about this. They have a tendancy to usher in improvements in the middle and end of a given cars production run to try and cut down on customer dissatisfaction/complaints. The 3 Lucernes I drove were all 2006 models. I have yet to try out a 2007 or soon to be 2008 to see if the problem is any different. Of course the easiest fix would have been to offer the 3.6 liter DOHC V6 as in the LaCrosse CSX. That engine in any body I have driven is a marvel for smoothness and quietness that rivals the best from overseas but thats GM for ya!

Thanks for your additional insight on this problem. I have have carefully and respectfully drafted a 1-page letter to my Buick Service Advisor (cc: to the Service Manager) which I will take with me in my next service visit. I have included your insightful historical perspectives (paraphrased for brevity) and even offered to cooperate with them in resolving/mitigating this issue. I specifically asked if there are other TSBs or aftermarket products that would be helpful. If nothing comes of their efforts, I figure this letter will be a good background show of good faith and cooperation on my part when/if I take it to the next level (Regional Manager or even Bob Lutz himself). Just curious: if I pursued a custom fix on my own, is replacement by the 3.6L DOHC V6 possible, and, if so, about what kind of cost might be incurred?

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My father has a Lucerne CX and I've driven it a few times: it's so quiet I couldn't tell it was running from inside. Quiet Tuning is not 'hype'.

I lived in a LaCrosse CX for a week. Under normal driving, it was quiet enough and very pleasant. It's quieter than previous Buicks I've driven or owned. Let's face it, all OHV V6s, be they Buick, Chevy or Ford/DCX, have a sound that is different from that of a V8 and, under acceleration, a muffled exhaust note will display this sound to you. If you want to notice a difference within the GM ranks, take a basic GP V6 out for a spin and hit the gas. When you come back to the Buick, you will inevitably think it's quiet. Other than that, I don't know what to say. Edited by trinacriabob
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