Timing belt: Age vs. Mileage
#4
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Timing belt: Age vs. Mileage
On 12/8/04 9:55 AM, in article
feb12ec2710b802718e4dfab2c1f5c47@loc...o utautos.com, "zonie"
<sjemoomaw@nospam> wrote:
> Depending on when that car was built , it could be nearly seven years old.
> Even though the miles are low if it was my car I would replace the belt. I
> have always gone 5 years or 60,000 miles ans have no problems. Scott
>
Unless you live in an area of severe heat or severe cold, you are changing
it about half again more often than necessary. I would expect that you would
have no problems, except in the wallet.
feb12ec2710b802718e4dfab2c1f5c47@loc...o utautos.com, "zonie"
<sjemoomaw@nospam> wrote:
> Depending on when that car was built , it could be nearly seven years old.
> Even though the miles are low if it was my car I would replace the belt. I
> have always gone 5 years or 60,000 miles ans have no problems. Scott
>
Unless you live in an area of severe heat or severe cold, you are changing
it about half again more often than necessary. I would expect that you would
have no problems, except in the wallet.
#5
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Timing belt: Age vs. Mileage
On 12/8/04 9:55 AM, in article
feb12ec2710b802718e4dfab2c1f5c47@loc...o utautos.com, "zonie"
<sjemoomaw@nospam> wrote:
> Depending on when that car was built , it could be nearly seven years old.
> Even though the miles are low if it was my car I would replace the belt. I
> have always gone 5 years or 60,000 miles ans have no problems. Scott
>
Unless you live in an area of severe heat or severe cold, you are changing
it about half again more often than necessary. I would expect that you would
have no problems, except in the wallet.
feb12ec2710b802718e4dfab2c1f5c47@loc...o utautos.com, "zonie"
<sjemoomaw@nospam> wrote:
> Depending on when that car was built , it could be nearly seven years old.
> Even though the miles are low if it was my car I would replace the belt. I
> have always gone 5 years or 60,000 miles ans have no problems. Scott
>
Unless you live in an area of severe heat or severe cold, you are changing
it about half again more often than necessary. I would expect that you would
have no problems, except in the wallet.
#8
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Timing belt: Age vs. Mileage
In article <52cbee22fb5d20f0d1d243c8fec6d050@localhost.talkab outautos.com>
"zonie" <sjemoomaw@nospam> writes:
>I live In Phoenix summer highs 110 -120. And from his e-mail I think he
>lives In Russia. One extreme to the Other
I'm in Houston, summer highs 95~99 and a long "summer" with 90º + temps
beginning in June and extending through early October some years.
My wife's car is a '96 Lexus LS400 w/55k miles on it (recommended
replacement at 90k). My dealer inspected the factory-original T-belt last
year at 52k miles and said "it's fine, let's look at it again in another
couple years if you get to 60k by then" ;^)
Manufacturer's "recommended" replacement intervals are always way
conservative, designed to avoid any problems long before you might expect
some.
I bought a used '91 Accord w/120k on the clock for my son when he first
started driving. The original owner kept meticulous records, but only
changed oil every 5k miles and had never put a T-belt on it. My son ran
the mileage out to 149k before driving it into 4-feet of water during
tropical storm Allison, (June 2001) ruining it.
"zonie" <sjemoomaw@nospam> writes:
>I live In Phoenix summer highs 110 -120. And from his e-mail I think he
>lives In Russia. One extreme to the Other
I'm in Houston, summer highs 95~99 and a long "summer" with 90º + temps
beginning in June and extending through early October some years.
My wife's car is a '96 Lexus LS400 w/55k miles on it (recommended
replacement at 90k). My dealer inspected the factory-original T-belt last
year at 52k miles and said "it's fine, let's look at it again in another
couple years if you get to 60k by then" ;^)
Manufacturer's "recommended" replacement intervals are always way
conservative, designed to avoid any problems long before you might expect
some.
I bought a used '91 Accord w/120k on the clock for my son when he first
started driving. The original owner kept meticulous records, but only
changed oil every 5k miles and had never put a T-belt on it. My son ran
the mileage out to 149k before driving it into 4-feet of water during
tropical storm Allison, (June 2001) ruining it.
#9
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Timing belt: Age vs. Mileage
In article <52cbee22fb5d20f0d1d243c8fec6d050@localhost.talkab outautos.com>
"zonie" <sjemoomaw@nospam> writes:
>I live In Phoenix summer highs 110 -120. And from his e-mail I think he
>lives In Russia. One extreme to the Other
I'm in Houston, summer highs 95~99 and a long "summer" with 90º + temps
beginning in June and extending through early October some years.
My wife's car is a '96 Lexus LS400 w/55k miles on it (recommended
replacement at 90k). My dealer inspected the factory-original T-belt last
year at 52k miles and said "it's fine, let's look at it again in another
couple years if you get to 60k by then" ;^)
Manufacturer's "recommended" replacement intervals are always way
conservative, designed to avoid any problems long before you might expect
some.
I bought a used '91 Accord w/120k on the clock for my son when he first
started driving. The original owner kept meticulous records, but only
changed oil every 5k miles and had never put a T-belt on it. My son ran
the mileage out to 149k before driving it into 4-feet of water during
tropical storm Allison, (June 2001) ruining it.
"zonie" <sjemoomaw@nospam> writes:
>I live In Phoenix summer highs 110 -120. And from his e-mail I think he
>lives In Russia. One extreme to the Other
I'm in Houston, summer highs 95~99 and a long "summer" with 90º + temps
beginning in June and extending through early October some years.
My wife's car is a '96 Lexus LS400 w/55k miles on it (recommended
replacement at 90k). My dealer inspected the factory-original T-belt last
year at 52k miles and said "it's fine, let's look at it again in another
couple years if you get to 60k by then" ;^)
Manufacturer's "recommended" replacement intervals are always way
conservative, designed to avoid any problems long before you might expect
some.
I bought a used '91 Accord w/120k on the clock for my son when he first
started driving. The original owner kept meticulous records, but only
changed oil every 5k miles and had never put a T-belt on it. My son ran
the mileage out to 149k before driving it into 4-feet of water during
tropical storm Allison, (June 2001) ruining it.
#10
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Timing belt: Age vs. Mileage
In article <52cbee22fb5d20f0d1d243c8fec6d050
@localhost.talkaboutautos.com>, sjemoomaw@nospam says...
> I live In Phoenix summer highs 110 -120. And from his e-mail I think he
> lives In Russia.
Uh, maybe not. Hint: Google his "name" and "organization".
Dave
@localhost.talkaboutautos.com>, sjemoomaw@nospam says...
> I live In Phoenix summer highs 110 -120. And from his e-mail I think he
> lives In Russia.
Uh, maybe not. Hint: Google his "name" and "organization".
Dave
#11
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Timing belt: Age vs. Mileage
In article <52cbee22fb5d20f0d1d243c8fec6d050
@localhost.talkaboutautos.com>, sjemoomaw@nospam says...
> I live In Phoenix summer highs 110 -120. And from his e-mail I think he
> lives In Russia.
Uh, maybe not. Hint: Google his "name" and "organization".
Dave
@localhost.talkaboutautos.com>, sjemoomaw@nospam says...
> I live In Phoenix summer highs 110 -120. And from his e-mail I think he
> lives In Russia.
Uh, maybe not. Hint: Google his "name" and "organization".
Dave
#12
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Timing belt: Age vs. Mileage
In article <2nafr09tauj8mf1esfr2mklbu18j2tk5ui@4ax.com>, wdg@
[204.52.135.1] says...
> In article <52cbee22fb5d20f0d1d243c8fec6d050@localhost.talkab outautos.com>
> "zonie" <sjemoomaw@nospam> writes:
>
> >I live In Phoenix summer highs 110 -120. And from his e-mail I think he
> >lives In Russia. One extreme to the Other
> I'm in Houston, summer highs 95~99 and a long "summer" with 90º + temps
> beginning in June and extending through early October some years.
>
> My wife's car is a '96 Lexus LS400 w/55k miles on it (recommended
> replacement at 90k). My dealer inspected the factory-original T-belt last
> year at 52k miles and said "it's fine, let's look at it again in another
> couple years if you get to 60k by then" ;^)
>
> Manufacturer's "recommended" replacement intervals are always way
> conservative, designed to avoid any problems long before you might expect
> some.
An alternate data point: I'm in Houston too, and the T-belt recently
broke on my '91 CRX with just under 115K on the clock. It had been
replaced at 60K per factory recommendation, but that had been almost
seven years ago. It had dry-rotted to the point where several teeth were
almost stripped off.
Fortunately, I was incredibly lucky and didn't suffer any top-end damage
as a result of the failure, but that experience made a believer out of
me when it comes to replacing the T-belt every five years regardless of
mileage, at least on the older Honda engines.
Dave
[204.52.135.1] says...
> In article <52cbee22fb5d20f0d1d243c8fec6d050@localhost.talkab outautos.com>
> "zonie" <sjemoomaw@nospam> writes:
>
> >I live In Phoenix summer highs 110 -120. And from his e-mail I think he
> >lives In Russia. One extreme to the Other
> I'm in Houston, summer highs 95~99 and a long "summer" with 90º + temps
> beginning in June and extending through early October some years.
>
> My wife's car is a '96 Lexus LS400 w/55k miles on it (recommended
> replacement at 90k). My dealer inspected the factory-original T-belt last
> year at 52k miles and said "it's fine, let's look at it again in another
> couple years if you get to 60k by then" ;^)
>
> Manufacturer's "recommended" replacement intervals are always way
> conservative, designed to avoid any problems long before you might expect
> some.
An alternate data point: I'm in Houston too, and the T-belt recently
broke on my '91 CRX with just under 115K on the clock. It had been
replaced at 60K per factory recommendation, but that had been almost
seven years ago. It had dry-rotted to the point where several teeth were
almost stripped off.
Fortunately, I was incredibly lucky and didn't suffer any top-end damage
as a result of the failure, but that experience made a believer out of
me when it comes to replacing the T-belt every five years regardless of
mileage, at least on the older Honda engines.
Dave
#13
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Timing belt: Age vs. Mileage
In article <2nafr09tauj8mf1esfr2mklbu18j2tk5ui@4ax.com>, wdg@
[204.52.135.1] says...
> In article <52cbee22fb5d20f0d1d243c8fec6d050@localhost.talkab outautos.com>
> "zonie" <sjemoomaw@nospam> writes:
>
> >I live In Phoenix summer highs 110 -120. And from his e-mail I think he
> >lives In Russia. One extreme to the Other
> I'm in Houston, summer highs 95~99 and a long "summer" with 90º + temps
> beginning in June and extending through early October some years.
>
> My wife's car is a '96 Lexus LS400 w/55k miles on it (recommended
> replacement at 90k). My dealer inspected the factory-original T-belt last
> year at 52k miles and said "it's fine, let's look at it again in another
> couple years if you get to 60k by then" ;^)
>
> Manufacturer's "recommended" replacement intervals are always way
> conservative, designed to avoid any problems long before you might expect
> some.
An alternate data point: I'm in Houston too, and the T-belt recently
broke on my '91 CRX with just under 115K on the clock. It had been
replaced at 60K per factory recommendation, but that had been almost
seven years ago. It had dry-rotted to the point where several teeth were
almost stripped off.
Fortunately, I was incredibly lucky and didn't suffer any top-end damage
as a result of the failure, but that experience made a believer out of
me when it comes to replacing the T-belt every five years regardless of
mileage, at least on the older Honda engines.
Dave
[204.52.135.1] says...
> In article <52cbee22fb5d20f0d1d243c8fec6d050@localhost.talkab outautos.com>
> "zonie" <sjemoomaw@nospam> writes:
>
> >I live In Phoenix summer highs 110 -120. And from his e-mail I think he
> >lives In Russia. One extreme to the Other
> I'm in Houston, summer highs 95~99 and a long "summer" with 90º + temps
> beginning in June and extending through early October some years.
>
> My wife's car is a '96 Lexus LS400 w/55k miles on it (recommended
> replacement at 90k). My dealer inspected the factory-original T-belt last
> year at 52k miles and said "it's fine, let's look at it again in another
> couple years if you get to 60k by then" ;^)
>
> Manufacturer's "recommended" replacement intervals are always way
> conservative, designed to avoid any problems long before you might expect
> some.
An alternate data point: I'm in Houston too, and the T-belt recently
broke on my '91 CRX with just under 115K on the clock. It had been
replaced at 60K per factory recommendation, but that had been almost
seven years ago. It had dry-rotted to the point where several teeth were
almost stripped off.
Fortunately, I was incredibly lucky and didn't suffer any top-end damage
as a result of the failure, but that experience made a believer out of
me when it comes to replacing the T-belt every five years regardless of
mileage, at least on the older Honda engines.
Dave
#14
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Timing belt: Age vs. Mileage
In article <MPG.1c2191693b4b98ba989f00@207.14.113.17> Dave Garrett
<dave@compassnet.com> writes:
>An alternate data point: I'm in Houston too, and the T-belt recently
>broke on my '91 CRX with just under 115K on the clock. It had been
>replaced at 60K per factory recommendation, but that had been almost
>seven years ago. It had dry-rotted to the point where several teeth were
>almost stripped off.
Hmmm, OK, have to ask, was the replacement belt OEM from the dealership or
one from the aftermarket? Rubber dry-rotting early smacks of a possible
quality issue. OZONE and U/V light (along with heat) are the enemies of
rubber products. We can probably rule out the sunlight, but good quality
belts are designed to withstand punishment. Sounds like the replacement
didn't measure up to the quality of the original.
<dave@compassnet.com> writes:
>An alternate data point: I'm in Houston too, and the T-belt recently
>broke on my '91 CRX with just under 115K on the clock. It had been
>replaced at 60K per factory recommendation, but that had been almost
>seven years ago. It had dry-rotted to the point where several teeth were
>almost stripped off.
Hmmm, OK, have to ask, was the replacement belt OEM from the dealership or
one from the aftermarket? Rubber dry-rotting early smacks of a possible
quality issue. OZONE and U/V light (along with heat) are the enemies of
rubber products. We can probably rule out the sunlight, but good quality
belts are designed to withstand punishment. Sounds like the replacement
didn't measure up to the quality of the original.
#15
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Timing belt: Age vs. Mileage
In article <MPG.1c2191693b4b98ba989f00@207.14.113.17> Dave Garrett
<dave@compassnet.com> writes:
>An alternate data point: I'm in Houston too, and the T-belt recently
>broke on my '91 CRX with just under 115K on the clock. It had been
>replaced at 60K per factory recommendation, but that had been almost
>seven years ago. It had dry-rotted to the point where several teeth were
>almost stripped off.
Hmmm, OK, have to ask, was the replacement belt OEM from the dealership or
one from the aftermarket? Rubber dry-rotting early smacks of a possible
quality issue. OZONE and U/V light (along with heat) are the enemies of
rubber products. We can probably rule out the sunlight, but good quality
belts are designed to withstand punishment. Sounds like the replacement
didn't measure up to the quality of the original.
<dave@compassnet.com> writes:
>An alternate data point: I'm in Houston too, and the T-belt recently
>broke on my '91 CRX with just under 115K on the clock. It had been
>replaced at 60K per factory recommendation, but that had been almost
>seven years ago. It had dry-rotted to the point where several teeth were
>almost stripped off.
Hmmm, OK, have to ask, was the replacement belt OEM from the dealership or
one from the aftermarket? Rubber dry-rotting early smacks of a possible
quality issue. OZONE and U/V light (along with heat) are the enemies of
rubber products. We can probably rule out the sunlight, but good quality
belts are designed to withstand punishment. Sounds like the replacement
didn't measure up to the quality of the original.