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Timing
belts, the sleeping time bomb |
by:
Ralph
Hoffmann |
Interference
Engines: ....Free Useful informatio
When buying a used car always insist on
determining if the vehicle has a rubber
timing-belt. Be aware that about five years
ago an International Oil Company did a follow
up on 5,000 cars it had turned back after
3 year leases and traced them to their eventual
private owners. All the cars had by then
passed through wholesale auction markets
and likely one or more retail dealers before
being sold to a private owner. The survey
disclosed that 50% of the cars had their
odometers illegally turned back.
When buying a used car, supposedly with
40,000 miles for example, and determining
it has a rubber timing belt, insist on a
written guarantee from the seller to guarantee
in writing to replace the timing belt at
no charge if it fails within another 20,000
miles, a typical recommended total amount
(Call any Dealer to get the recommended
amount for the particular make of vehicle).
After all, the vehicle may in fact already
have 55,000 miles on it. If the seller will
not make that guarantee, then he is admitting
that the mileage is probably not accurate
and by implication may well have been turned
back. If the seller will not make that guarantee,
consider a compromise, such as $100 maximum
cost. If not acceptable, walk away and look
elsewhere."
Before buying any car, especially 4-cylinder
foreign cars, or even 6-cyl. BMW, be aware
of the unavoidable cost of $400-$800 to
replace the timing belt at anywhere from
50,000 to 70,000 miles if the car has an
'interference' type of engine. The sales
person will invariably not mention that
an 'interference' type engine powers the
vehicle and may not even know what one is.
If a timing belt on an interference engine
is not replaced at recommended intervals,
the repair cost when the belt breaks (not
gradually, but always catastrophically)
could increase to $3,000 to $5,000 due to
engine failure because parts have smashed
into each other
An 'interference' engine is an engine design
that has been avoided by some manufacturers
for well over 80 years. General Motors,
Chrysler, etc., typically use a metal chain-type
timing belt on push-rod engines (often called
a timing chain) to transmit torque from
the engine crankshaft o the engine camshaft
that opens the valves that admit air and
fuel. (Note: on some new cars the fuel is
admitted not through the valves but through
injectors in the top of the cylinder. Rather
than use a steel timing chain, interference
engines may use a rubber timing belt with
its limited life, whereas steel timing belts
typically last 150,000 to 200,000 miles
or more.
Valves open further in an interference engine
and project further into the combustion
chamber than in a 'free-running' engine.
This allows outside air at atmospheric pressure
flow faster into the combustion chamber
through the larger valve opening. The engine
can therefore inhale more air, be a little
smaller, and still create as much power
while reducing its. manufactured cost and
also guaranteeing future repair business
for its dealer. If a rubber timing belt
breaks by not being replaced soon enough,
some of the valves stuck in their open position
will collide with the top of the pistons,
thereby breaking or irreversibly damaging
one or the other or both. To make matters
worse, it is not possible to measure the
wear on such a rubber belt so that it could
be replaced when there is some indication
of imminent failure. Failure in these belts
is catastrophic, without warning. This will
require a whole new engine be installed.
Woe to the owner. Finally, the rubber belt
may have to be replaced long before 60,000
miles solely due to its age. This is really
playing a bad poker hand. Interference engines
are like a time bomb waiting to explode
unless replacing the timing belt at the
recommended interval. Be aware of that guaranteed
future expense before buying a new car,
or especially a used car, " with such an
engine.
For details on this subject or for recommended
mileage to replace rubber timing belts on
interference engines, connect on the Internet
to http://www.gates.com/brochure.cfm?brochure=2389&location_id=3053,
a worldwide
manufacturer of such belts. When its web
site appears, click on Replacement parts/Automotive.
Look for 'Timing belt replacement Guide'.
Visit http://www.AutoTruckData.com for related
resources
Copyright 2204-2005 by Beacon Data LLC.
Reprinted with permission
About the author:
Ralph Hoffmann has a major in Applied Mathematics,
and became fascinated with the anomalies
inherent in automotive leasing. His web
site http://www.autotruckdata.comaddresses
some of the fascinating results.
Circulated by Bandoni
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