Landed a sweet LSS
- human
- Posts like an LN3

- Posts: 464
- Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2010 11:37 pm
- Year and Trim: Daily Driver: 2011 Impala LT
Weekender: '95 Aurora - Location: Pines of Carolina
Re: Landed a sweet LSS
Wow, what a crazy three days! I picked up the LSS in Philly on Wednesday afternoon, got home with it on Thursday, and sold the Bonneville on Friday.
The car ran beautifully on the drive back to North Carolina, although it didn't get quite as good gas mileage as the Bonneville. That could be because all the gas I found in Pennsylvania and Virginia was gasohol, which I tend to avoid because it costs me 2-3 mpg.
There are a couple of issues with the car that I need to address. The biggest being the "Check Engine" light is on. I had Auto Zone scan it yesterday and the code they pulled was 0140, which indicates a bad oxygen sensor. How much of a pain is that to fix? The other problem is the high beam switch doesn't click to keep the high beams turned on. Is that an easy fix or am I looking at replacing the steering column? If I have to replace it, I want to get one from a Bonneville that has the turn signal lever up at the 10 o'clock position instead of an OldsmoBuick one that has it positioned just below 9 o'clock.
One other oddity on the car is the leather appears to have been spray painted to make it look newer and fresher, although that makes it feel dry and rough.
Other than that, the car is great.
The car ran beautifully on the drive back to North Carolina, although it didn't get quite as good gas mileage as the Bonneville. That could be because all the gas I found in Pennsylvania and Virginia was gasohol, which I tend to avoid because it costs me 2-3 mpg.
There are a couple of issues with the car that I need to address. The biggest being the "Check Engine" light is on. I had Auto Zone scan it yesterday and the code they pulled was 0140, which indicates a bad oxygen sensor. How much of a pain is that to fix? The other problem is the high beam switch doesn't click to keep the high beams turned on. Is that an easy fix or am I looking at replacing the steering column? If I have to replace it, I want to get one from a Bonneville that has the turn signal lever up at the 10 o'clock position instead of an OldsmoBuick one that has it positioned just below 9 o'clock.
One other oddity on the car is the leather appears to have been spray painted to make it look newer and fresher, although that makes it feel dry and rough.
Other than that, the car is great.
Last edited by human on Sat Jun 02, 2012 4:36 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Daily Driver: 2011 Chevy Impala LT
Weekend Toy: 1995 Olds Aurora
Sold but not forgotten: 1997 Olds LSS 1995 Pontiac Bonneville SLE
Weekend Toy: 1995 Olds Aurora
Sold but not forgotten: 1997 Olds LSS 1995 Pontiac Bonneville SLE
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Madcarpenter
- SSE Member

- Posts: 135
- Joined: Sat Mar 17, 2012 2:23 am
- Year and Trim: 1995 SE
- Location: Portland, OR... Nine months of rain per year, yet wicked expensive tap water...
Re: Landed a sweet LSS
An upstream O2 sensor is not difficult to replace, and the worn old sensor is likely the reason for your reduced MPG's, as it's probably misleading your car's computer into thinking the engine is running 'lean', and causing it to use excess fuel.
Pre-soak its threads with a few squirts of 'PB Blaster' or 'Kroil' the day before you remove it, invest in a 7/8" O2 sensor socket and a looong extension bar to help access it (as it's located at the center rear of your engine, in the exhaust pipe), and replace it with either an AC Delco or Denso brand sensor, NEVER Bosch. Take care to make sure the O2 sensor's cable is not in contact with a spark plug wire after re-installing it.
Pre-soak its threads with a few squirts of 'PB Blaster' or 'Kroil' the day before you remove it, invest in a 7/8" O2 sensor socket and a looong extension bar to help access it (as it's located at the center rear of your engine, in the exhaust pipe), and replace it with either an AC Delco or Denso brand sensor, NEVER Bosch. Take care to make sure the O2 sensor's cable is not in contact with a spark plug wire after re-installing it.
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00Beast
- Retired Site Developer

- Posts: 20960
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Re: Landed a sweet LSS
Are you sure you don't flick the stalk forward (towards dash) to engage the high-beams? That's how 00+ and pretty much all new cars are...
Bye Bye:

RIP sandrock

RIP sandrock
Sirius wrote:Think about it. You’re tooling down the road in your Prius, knowing full-well that this thing being green is as big a sham as federally mandated ethanol-enriched gas, Russia pulling out of Ukraine, and Obamacare.
- Backhoe
- Posts like an L27

- Posts: 622
- Joined: Tue May 11, 2010 12:48 pm
- Year and Trim: '98 LSS L67
- Location: Victoria B.C. Canada WCBF '11 Survivor
Re: Landed a sweet LSS
It's a pull-back switch for the high beams on my '97.00Beast wrote:Are you sure you don't flick the stalk forward (towards dash) to engage the high-beams? That's how 00+ and pretty much all new cars are...

1998 Olds LSS/L67, 92K miles, Intense FWI, SSAC headers, 3.2 MPS, cat delete, 180 stat, AL 103's, HPT.
1996 Olds Eighty Eight LS/L36, 146K miles, mostly stock
1997 Olds LSS/L36, 95K miles, raided for dent free parts and sold
1989 Bonneville LE Gem (sold)
1987 Bonneville LE (retired)
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ChilinMichael
- Posts like a Northstar

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Re: Landed a sweet LSS
I am beyond jealous, wow...just wow.
- human
- Posts like an LN3

- Posts: 464
- Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2010 11:37 pm
- Year and Trim: Daily Driver: 2011 Impala LT
Weekender: '95 Aurora - Location: Pines of Carolina
Re: Landed a sweet LSS
So I've had the car for almost three weeks now and it has its share of minor quirks, as any 15-year-old car will, but I'm overall quite impressed with it. Having owned two LSS's prior to this one, I pretty much knew what I was getting into, so there were no great surprises there. The big surprise was that the LSS has much tighter handling than my Bonneville. Of course, that could have something to do with the fact that the Bonneville needed a set of shocks.
Still, there are three things I definitely prefer about the Bonneville:
Still, there are three things I definitely prefer about the Bonneville:
- The larger rear view mirrors. Yeah, they're not as sleek looking as the OldsmoBuick mirrors, but the definitely reduce the blind spots.
- The position of the turn signal lever: The Bonneville's lever is positioned just above 10 o'clock, which allows for easy access by simply extending the fingers without taking them off the wheel. There is really no excuse for the Olds lever being positioned just below 9 o'clock.
- The red instrument panel lights: They just look cool, but y'all already knew that.
Daily Driver: 2011 Chevy Impala LT
Weekend Toy: 1995 Olds Aurora
Sold but not forgotten: 1997 Olds LSS 1995 Pontiac Bonneville SLE
Weekend Toy: 1995 Olds Aurora
Sold but not forgotten: 1997 Olds LSS 1995 Pontiac Bonneville SLE
Re: Landed a sweet LSS
Nice Oldsmobile! I remember seeing this car on ebay and drooling over it myself!
1993 Bonneville SLE
1988 Olds Toronado Trofeo
1985 Olds Cutlass Ciera Holiday
Past: 1988 Delta 88, 1988 98 Touring Sedan, 1992 Bonneville SE, 1993 LeSabre Custom, 2001 Aurora 3.5
1988 Olds Toronado Trofeo
1985 Olds Cutlass Ciera Holiday
Past: 1988 Delta 88, 1988 98 Touring Sedan, 1992 Bonneville SE, 1993 LeSabre Custom, 2001 Aurora 3.5
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monte0
- GXP Member

- Posts: 256
- Joined: Thu Aug 09, 2012 1:55 pm
- Year and Trim: 1999 Bonneville SSE
- Location: NY
Re: Landed a sweet LSS
That's a sweet Olds! I was looking for a LSS myself but imposable to find, so ended up getting the one I got. It's not even a LS model but at least it has some options. Got you beat in the mileage thought, only have 22k on mine on a 99
1999 Bonneville SSE-79k
1970 Monte Carlo SS-waiting for new motor/trans best 12.5 at 109
2001 Regal GS-modded
1999 Olds 88-22,000 original miles
2004 Impala SS
1997 Regal GS-best 13.9 at 98.2
1999 Regal GS
2000 Regal GS
1997 Regal GS
1970 Monte Carlo SS-waiting for new motor/trans best 12.5 at 109
2001 Regal GS-modded
1999 Olds 88-22,000 original miles
2004 Impala SS
1997 Regal GS-best 13.9 at 98.2
1999 Regal GS
2000 Regal GS
1997 Regal GS
- human
- Posts like an LN3

- Posts: 464
- Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2010 11:37 pm
- Year and Trim: Daily Driver: 2011 Impala LT
Weekender: '95 Aurora - Location: Pines of Carolina
Re: Landed a sweet LSS
Yes, the LSS is a fairly rare car. Olds didn't do enough to market it or differentiate it from the standard Eighty-Eight. I think they were more interested in redirecting potential LSS buyers into the more expensive Aurora.
That is impressively low mileage on yours. My parents have '97 Eighty-Eight LS with about 35,000 miles on it.
That is impressively low mileage on yours. My parents have '97 Eighty-Eight LS with about 35,000 miles on it.
monte0 wrote:That's a sweet Olds! I was looking for a LSS myself but imposable to find, so ended up getting the one I got. It's not even a LS model but at least it has some options. Got you beat in the mileage thought, only have 22k on mine on a 99
Daily Driver: 2011 Chevy Impala LT
Weekend Toy: 1995 Olds Aurora
Sold but not forgotten: 1997 Olds LSS 1995 Pontiac Bonneville SLE
Weekend Toy: 1995 Olds Aurora
Sold but not forgotten: 1997 Olds LSS 1995 Pontiac Bonneville SLE
- Arrowhead
- Posts like an LG3

- Posts: 342
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- Year and Trim: 2000 SLE
2005 GXP - Location: Frederick, Maryland
Re: Landed a sweet LSS
Madcarpenter wrote:An upstream O2 sensor is not difficult to replace, and the worn old sensor is likely the reason for your reduced MPG's, as it's probably misleading your car's computer into thinking the engine is running 'lean', and causing it to use excess fuel.
Pre-soak its threads with a few squirts of 'PB Blaster' or 'Kroil' the day before you remove it, invest in a 7/8" O2 sensor socket and a looong extension bar to help access it (as it's located at the center rear of your engine, in the exhaust pipe), and replace it with either an AC Delco or Denso brand sensor, NEVER Bosch. Take care to make sure the O2 sensor's cable is not in contact with a spark plug wire after re-installing it.
Why not Bosch ? Great car human !! You were lucky buying from an ebay seller with such a low feedback score !
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monte0
- GXP Member

- Posts: 256
- Joined: Thu Aug 09, 2012 1:55 pm
- Year and Trim: 1999 Bonneville SSE
- Location: NY
Re: Landed a sweet LSS
Bosch sensors don't work well
1999 Bonneville SSE-79k
1970 Monte Carlo SS-waiting for new motor/trans best 12.5 at 109
2001 Regal GS-modded
1999 Olds 88-22,000 original miles
2004 Impala SS
1997 Regal GS-best 13.9 at 98.2
1999 Regal GS
2000 Regal GS
1997 Regal GS
1970 Monte Carlo SS-waiting for new motor/trans best 12.5 at 109
2001 Regal GS-modded
1999 Olds 88-22,000 original miles
2004 Impala SS
1997 Regal GS-best 13.9 at 98.2
1999 Regal GS
2000 Regal GS
1997 Regal GS


