novacaine
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posted on 21/4/10 at 10:20 PM |
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Tintop cambelt change - difficulty?
Evening all,
i need to do a cambelt change on my venerable punto JTD
ive been looking around at the engine locking kits, are they really necessary? is it just a case of lining up all of the marks on the belt with the
marks on the pulleys? ive done belt changes at college on some old engines that were out of the car and they were really easy, do i need a locking kit
for a more modern diesel?
cheers
Matt
And you run and you run to catch up with the sun but its sinking, Racing around to come up behind you again, the sun is the same in a relative way but
your older, shorter of breath and one day closer to death
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NigeEss
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posted on 21/4/10 at 10:50 PM |
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Some of the modern engines do require use of a locking system as they do not have
Woodruff keys on the crank pulley allowing it to spin relative to the crank,
usually as soon as you slacken the big nut !
Zetecs and a few French engines that I know of, there may be others.
The 1.250 Zetec in the Fiesta has no marks at all on the crank or crank pulley and relies
entirely on a locking pin.
Someone on here may have Autodata and could give more info but if need be I can get the
info from my friends one tomorrow for you.
Nige
[Edited on 21/4/10 by NigeEss]
Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so.................Douglas Adams.
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eznfrank
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posted on 22/4/10 at 06:19 AM |
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I previously bought a locking kit for my alfa 147 and sold the kit on again for only a quid less than I bought it, get a second hand one of the bay
and just sell it on again when you're done
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mad4x4
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posted on 22/4/10 at 08:30 AM |
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i'm trying to do a Jimny at the moment and there is no way to lock the crank to get the "big" nut slack to get the gaurd of to get
to the belt.........
ended up breaking the guard.....
Scot's do it better in Kilts.
MK INDY's Don't Self Centre Regardless of MK Setting !
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tomprescott
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posted on 22/4/10 at 11:33 AM |
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Some cars seem to be designed with the sole intention of making working on them a pita. Like the peugeot expert, to change the cambelt you have to
take off an engine mount!
A bird in the hand....
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pewe
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posted on 22/4/10 at 12:49 PM |
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Someone on here recommended the following if you can get suitable access:- Use a Stanley knife to cut the old belt to about half its width then slide
it to the back of the pullies.
Slide the new belt onto the front pushing the old belt off the back, then cut it & pull it out.
Slide new belt all the way on.
QED.
HTH.
Cheers, Pewe
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pgtips
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posted on 22/4/10 at 02:24 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by pewe
Someone on here recommended the following if you can get suitable access:- Use a Stanley knife to cut the old belt to about half its width then slide
it to the back of the pullies.
Slide the new belt onto the front pushing the old belt off the back, then cut it & pull it out.
Slide new belt all the way on.
QED.
HTH.
Cheers, Pewe
nooooo don't do it....no like that.
What about replacing the tensioners, rollers and the water pump all the same time. THAT is a good practice. Most of the manufacturers insist now to
renew the above items.
For what you going to save by doing it your self after you had to buy the correct tools to do the job, and the troubles you can get in too, just not
worth it.
Find you self a good local indy and let them do it. Then if it goes wrong you know who to blame.
If I die, my biggest fear is that my wife sells all my toys for the price I told her I bought them for...
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