timing belt
Gene3x said:
How did it turn out? How long did it take?
It turned out very well, thanks. I can't say it's an easy job since it is involved and takes awhile & requires taking a bunch of stuff off to get to the belt, but on the other hand, it wasn't difficult and is very intuitive. If it weren't for needing torque specs, the job could be done without a shop manual.
I spent maybe a total of 12 hrs on it since I spread it over 2 evenings and most of Saturday and was fighting a bad cold most of the time. Being this was my 1st timing belt ever, I think I did ok with it. There is abolutely no ambiguity about lining up the timing marks and tick marks on the new belt, very obvious. The only thing that threw me was the manual said to rotate the crank 2 full turns and verify the marks still line up, which they didn't, or so I thought. The crank & cam index marks lined up with the mark on the heads & TDC but the marks on the belt had advanced -- duh! the crank cog has 24 teeth, the cams have 48 teeth, but the belt has 211 teeth so the belt marks will only line up once with every 211x24 = 2954 crank revolutions. I bolted it up and called it good. She runs smooth as silk. I replaced both of the idlers but used the same hydraulic tensioner, there were no signs of leaks. I didn't replace the cam seals either, everything was clean except for indications of coolant weeping on the back of the water pump and had already bought a new one anyway, but the old w-p shaft is still snug, can't say the weeping was recent.
Turns out the fixtures I made to hold the cams from rotating weren't necessary, the cams won't rotate on their own when the crank is at 50 degrees past TDC, unless one were to deliberately turn them.
Rather than pre-compress & pin the tensioner, I used the 2 mounting bolts to pull it back in, lightly tapping the tensioner with a rubber mallet every so often until the bolts seated all the way. I made a device to keep the harmonic balancer from rotating when re-torquing it to the prescribed 181 ft-lb. Bucking a breaker bar on the chassis rail and bumping the starter works great for loosening the crank bolt.
A couple other notes, there are slots in the p-s pulley that provide access thru the middle for taking the p-s pump off so no need to remove the pulley. The p-s pump has to move out of the way to pull the alternator off to get the serpentine belt tensioner off. Also, since I planned ahead of time to use the starter to "bump" the crank bolt off (did I say it works slick!), I never disconnected the battery during the whole job, and when I had it all back together & started it for the 1st time, it threw a CEL light, most likely from using the starter while the cam position sensor connector was disconnected. Disconnecting the battery for a few minutes got rid of the CEL and all is good! Tonight I do the sparkplugs, NGK IFR6T11 (4589), $7.99 ea. at Checker's (CSK - Checker-Schucks-Kragen). The original plugs that are still in it are NGK IFR6A11, don't know what the difference is, web sources show the 6A's as an obsolete spec & the 6T's as the present OEM recommended spec.
Cheers!
Sorry to be so long-winded. E-mail me off-line & I have another .pdf step-by-step instruction with diagrams for the entire timing belt job.