Safety Recall NHTSA · 87V103000 Reported July 10, 1987

Electrical system:fuse and recepticle:circuit brea

General Motors, Llc · Electrical System · 5,162 vehicles potentially affected

NHTSA ID
87V103000
Manufacturer Campaign
NR (Not Reported)
Manufacturer
Component
Electrical System
Vehicles Affected
5,162
Recall Type
Vehicle
Report Received
July 10, 1987

Defect Summary

The headlamp circuit breaker may overheat at low beam causing an intermittent headlamp circuit.

Safety Consequence

Headlamp and foglamps would go out suddenly reducingdriver visibility, which could result in a vehicle crash.

Corrective Action

Revise foglamp circuit to prevent overheating of headlamp circuit.

What you should do

  1. Look up your VIN at nhtsa.gov/recalls to confirm this recall applies to your vehicle.
  2. Contact an authorized General Motors, Llc dealer and reference recall ID 87V103000 or campaign NR (Not Reported).
  3. Schedule the free repair. By federal law, the manufacturer must remedy the defect at no cost.
View Official NHTSA Notice →
Related

Similar Recalls

Other recalls from General Motors, Llc or involving Electrical System.

FAQ: Recall 87V103000

Your rights, the repair process, and what each field on this page means.

What is recall 87V103000?

NHTSA recall 87V103000 was issued by General Motors, Llc on July 10, 1987. It addresses: Electrical system:fuse and recepticle:circuit brea. The recall affects approximately 5,162 vehicles, with the defect involving the Electrical System component.

How do I get this recall repaired?

Contact any authorized General Motors, Llc dealer and reference NHTSA recall ID 87V103000 or the manufacturer campaign number NR (Not Reported). Under federal law, the repair is completely free regardless of vehicle age or owner history.

Is my vehicle included in this recall?

The only way to confirm is to look up your 17-character VIN at nhtsa.gov/recalls. NHTSA's tool will tell you if VIN-by-VIN this exact recall applies.

How long do I have to get a recall repair done?

There is no expiration on most federal safety recalls. Even if your vehicle is years old and you bought it used, the manufacturer is required to perform the repair at no cost.

Where does the data on this page come from?

All information on this page is sourced directly from the U.S. Department of Transportation public dataset for NHTSA recalls. Last refreshed: 2026-05-22. For the most current official notice, visit nhtsa.gov/recalls.