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#1
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#2
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Evening All, For anybody that remembers i've posted a few times about ongoing noises from the timing belt region of my Peugeot 306 HDi after a nightmare scenario 10,000 miles ago when I tried to get the belt and kit done along with crank pulley. That scenario - on undoing, the crank bolt snapped and it became necessary to have it drilled out. After this the only possible replacement involved chemical metal around a narrower bolt - original thread obviously shot. Crank pulley held tight with a separate nut. No signs of this botch having caused any problems according to (new) mechanic. The (old) job complete, I took the car away but have always been concerned by some noise from that general area, chirping/ticking at idle and scraping under load. Yesterday a wapping sound from the belt cover kicked in so I took it to the garage (different one, won't get into that again). The situation i'm now in - stripped down so far to the crank pulley held in by this chemical metal, i'm told it could take some serious time to get the crank pulley off, which is required to get the lower casing off to even figure out what was causing the timing related problem - there was clearly a problem - this belt looks 70,000 miles worn after 10,000. I ask them to continue and could be looking at 10 hours labour (best guess), another timing kit and possibly a water pump. The crank setup would have to be replaced in exactly the same way again. I can ask them to reassemble it to working for total of 3 hours labour but looking at the belt its going to wear to snapping sooner rather than later and then its no good to anybody. I'm not a guy that would pass the problem on to an unsuspecting ebay bidder, attractive a solution as it sounds. This car cost me £2800 in late 2005 and is about to hit 90k. Its seen around £800 quids work in the 1.5 years since bought. This is looking like around £500 more. They seem fairly confident they can do it, but not hour many hours it will take - removing old chemical metal being one hard to predict activity, and putting in more being the other. So, what would you do? My thoughts are its not saleable unfixed, I need a car, its been very reliable generally but i'd imagine 90k is about the threshold for other issues to start occuring - clutch works fine but bites past half way - thats another 3-400 quid job if it went. One plus point - i've probably stretched this problem out to about its limits without making things any worse - if i'd had it checked 6 months ago i'd be in exactly the same position. Any input or similar experiences welcome and appreciated. Cheers, Tom. |
#3
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Evening All, For anybody that remembers i've posted a few times about ongoing noises from the timing belt region of my Peugeot 306 HDi after a nightmare scenario 10,000 miles ago when I tried to get the belt and kit done along with crank pulley. That scenario - on undoing, the crank bolt snapped and it became necessary to have it drilled out. After this the only possible replacement involved chemical metal around a narrower bolt - original thread obviously shot. Crank pulley held tight with a separate nut. |
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No signs of this botch having caused any problems according to (new) mechanic. |
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The (old) job complete, I took the car away but have always been concerned by some noise from that general area, chirping/ticking at idle and scraping under load. Yesterday a wapping sound from the belt cover kicked in so I took it to the garage (different one, won't get into that again). The situation i'm now in - stripped down so far to the crank pulley held in by this chemical metal, i'm told it could take some serious time to get the crank pulley off, which is required to get the lower casing off to even figure out what was causing the timing related problem - there was clearly a problem - this belt looks 70,000 miles worn after 10,000. |
#4
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I, personally, would have replaced the crank with a half-decent second hand unit or at least removed it and had it worked on where the repair could be done and balanced correctly. Also did you know that your crank pulley is often dynamically balanced with the crank and altering it can cause problems? I'd only expect that to make difference on a high-revving lightweight engine though I must admit. |
#5
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"Tom Hawley" <motREVERSEDhawley (AT) ntlworld (DOT) com> wrote in message news:45B8FCC4.5070402 (AT) ntlworld (DOT) com... Evening All, For anybody that remembers i've posted a few times about ongoing noises from the timing belt region of my Peugeot 306 HDi after a nightmare scenario 10,000 miles ago when I tried to get the belt and kit done along with crank pulley. That scenario - on undoing, the crank bolt snapped and it became necessary to have it drilled out. After this the only possible replacement involved chemical metal around a narrower bolt - original thread obviously shot. Crank pulley held tight with a separate nut. Get the engine stripped down by someone who actually knows what they're doing and fit a decent s/h crank or at least repair the one you have properly. |
#6
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Even if the old thread in the c/s is damaged, maybe it can be bored in the lathe and a 'Helicoil' fitted to bring it back to std. If not it can probably be bored o/s and Helicoiled to accept a larger diameter bolt. Either way is a perfectly acceptable repair. |
#7
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Mike G wrote: Even if the old thread in the c/s is damaged, maybe it can be bored in the lathe and a 'Helicoil' fitted to bring it back to std. If not it can probably be bored o/s and Helicoiled to accept a larger diameter bolt. Either way is a perfectly acceptable repair. I would think the extra wear on the belt is due to the bodged pulley being slightly off alignment. Taking the engine out or stripping it to get the crank on it's own seems like the best way forward. Or take the easy but risky route and replace the belt every 5,000 miles? Doesn't seem like the sort of job you could do with the engine in the car to me, to get it all rebored/helicoiled dead straight. |
#8
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So, what would you do? |
#9
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Mike G wrote: Even if the old thread in the c/s is damaged, maybe it can be bored in the lathe and a 'Helicoil' fitted to bring it back to std. If not it can probably be bored o/s and Helicoiled to accept a larger diameter bolt. Either way is a perfectly acceptable repair. I would think the extra wear on the belt is due to the bodged pulley being slightly off alignment. Taking the engine out or stripping it to get the crank on it's own seems like the best way forward. Or take the easy but risky route and replace the belt every 5,000 miles? Doesn't seem like the sort of job you could do with the engine in the car to me, to get it all rebored/helicoiled dead straight. |
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