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Re: alfa-digest V9 #381
Since you HAVE to take the belt off to get at the front cam seals
(which one should always change when changing cams), you just replace
it with a new one. Also, do not change the belt without changing the
tensioner (if its one of the mechanical ones) and checking for leaks if
it's the factory hydraulic tensioner. Rule of thumb on Alfa 12-valve
V-6's: if you have to remove the belt, replace it. At around $US20 (for
the Goodyear part # 40120) It's cheap insurance. Since teardown is the
same, also ALWAYS replace the water pump. Never replace a belt without
replacing the mechanical tensioner and checking a hydraulic one for
leaks. If you don't and the mechanical tensioner's spring goes bad
(they tend to pop out of the housing like the mainspring on a cheap
clock), your belt will skip time.
This is one area on the V-6 that it is just not prudent to be
nonchalant about. A broken belt or one that skips time can destroy the
engine before you can say Nicola Romeo. It's not worth the risk just to
save a few bucks. Just my opinion, you understand, but I have learned
these lessons the hard way and I hope that by passing this along I can
save you from doing the same.
George Graves
'86 GTV-6
now with 3.0 liter 'S' engine
and Power Steering
On Monday, March 31, 2003, at 03:43 PM, alfa-digest wrote:
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2003 18:39:45 +0000
From: [email protected]
Subject: V6 timing belt, the well worn subject...
I'm going to be installing new cams in my Verde. How much extra work
is it to
change the timing belt at the same time? Lets assume that I'm not
replacing
the water pump or tensioner, just the belt itself.
I'd have to go back to the records to find out how old the current one
is. I'm
pretty sure it's well within expected life.
TIA
- -Peter
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