Junkyard Find: 2001 Oldsmobile Alero Sedan With Manual Transmission

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

General Motors built cars on the N Platform and its derivatives from the 1985 through 2005 model years, and five-speed manual transmissions were available on various N-based machines throughout that time. Very few American buyers of these cars were willing to operate three pedals by the dawn of the 21st century, but I have managed to find a five-speed-equipped Olds Alero in a Denver self-service car graveyard.

By 2001, the only members of the N-Body family (now renamed the GMX130 for its final generation) available with manual transmissions were four-cylinder-equipped Pontiac Grand Ams and Oldsmobile Aleros.

You could get a new Alero with a Getrag five-on-the-floor all the way through the demise of Oldsmobile in 2004.

I'd been looking for a discarded 1999-2004 Alero or 1999-2005 Grand Am with a manual transmission for years, with no success until I spotted this car. Until today's Junkyard Find, the newest manual-equipped N-Car I'd found had been a 1994 Grand Am.

To get the 2001 Alero with a five-speed manual, you had to order the entry-level GX model (complete with hand-cranked windows and no keyless entry) or the four-cylinder version of the more upscale GL2. Then you selected the manual transmission option and got a $785 credit ($1,353 in 2023 dollars).

Air conditioning and an AM/FM/CD radio were standard equipment on all 2001 Aleros. This car is a GX sedan, so its MSRP would have been $17,210 ($29,666 after inflation).

The GL1, GL2 and GLS trim levels could be purchased with a 3.4-liter pushrod V6 engine rated at 170 horsepower, but this 150-horse 2.4-liter Oldsmobile Quad 4 engine was required if you wanted to shift your own gears. Starting with the 2002 model year, the Quad 4 was ditched in favor of a 2.2-liter Ecotec four-banger making 140 horses.

I am aware that some members of the GM enthusiast community do not consider the LD9 2.4 Twin Cam engine to be a true Quad 4, but they're the same ones who deny that the original Cadillac Seville was related to the Chevy Nova. Feel free to debate these theological points in the comments.

The 2001 Alero's siblings were the Chevrolet Malibu, the Oldsmobile Cutlass and the Pontiac Grand Am. The Malibu moved over to the Epsilon platform for 2004, but the GMX130 version stayed in production as the fleet-only 2004-2005 Chevrolet Classic.

The Oldsmobile Division was already known to be doomed by the time this car rolled off the line at Lansing Assembly.

The final Oldsmobile built was an Alero, in fact.

There's no rust and the interior looks decent, though the paint is a bit faded.

We can assume some costly mechanical problem sent this car here, though it could have been a tow-away that was illegally parked and wasn't worth rescuing due to the low resale value for cars with too many pedals and the badges of a long-defunct brand.

Hug your kids. Hug the road.

Connect to the road like a punch to the jaw!


[Images: Murilee Martin]


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Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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  • Art Vandelay Art Vandelay on May 02, 2023

    S#!TBOX

  • WICKED xKID WICKED xKID on May 03, 2023

    I got an Alero 2000. First one i ever owned i could say very much satisfied with this car bought it for $1500 with literally 100k miles on it .the lady only used it for work in a 5 to 10 miles away from home. I'm second owner of this beautiful twin cam vehicle.💪😎

  • 1995 SC First off, several companies building cars owe their survival to government regulation (not just the ones here in the good ol' USA either) so I am not all that sympathetic.Second, What exactly makes an EV so much easier to assemble? You get a powertrain and bolt it in just like an ICE car. Everything else is similar. Is hanging an exhaust a herculean effort?
  • Tassos High value car for high value people. I, TASSOS (vip) can relate to it. BIDEN DOLLARS SPAKE
  • Tassos WHEN I WAS A CONSULTANT (for Warsaw vip people), WASHINGTON LOBBIES WERE A FORCE TO BE RECKONED WITH.
  • Slavuta "Interestingly, making vehicles more fuel efficient also gradually lowers the amount of fuel taxes collected due to the fact that drivers would be spending less money at the pump." - no big deal. up the tax, problem solved. Yes, you drive your family car - the 1.3L model @40MPG and still pay $6/GL. Win-win -- You save - gov collects
  • FreedMike "If you’re curious why there are so many mysteriously sized vehicles carrying ludicrously high price tags these days, it’s a combination of bad regulations and old-fashioned corporate greed."Bit of a stretch to blame the big bad gubmint for every other car being a 6,000 pound truck, if you ask me...the government can have any regulation it wants, and manufacturers can be as greedy as they want, but all that would be meaningless if these products bombed in the marketplace, and they didn't. So...if you want someone to blame, that's simple: the car buying public.As far as the rest...if you like EVS, buy one. If you don't, then buy something else. Peace out.
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