Originally posted by 8E45E
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you cant fix stupid....
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I had a Honda Delsol for 1 week before the manual trans grenaded all over Interstate 94. The car was supposedly kept up by the previous owner and had low miles 126k. I never bought another Honda again. Prior to this car I had an accord that blew a head gasket and left me stranded out in the middle of nowhere without a phone. Fun times.
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No point in fixing it until you do enough damage to make it worth your time to tear it down. LOL
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The car was on the highway when the timing belt broke the first time. we replaced the belt and got the car running but it had a heavy miss and lose of power. After we did a compression test it was found the car had a vent valve. The gentlemen was advised of this but wanted to drive the car until he got the funds to replace the head. Two week later he calls me and says it lost all power and wont run. When I arrive to his house the car is running a but barley. he drives it to my house smoking and clattering I told him its done but ill pull the head to see if I could still fix it. After pulling the head we found the busted valve.
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Maybe the belt skipped a tooth rather than broke? Otherwise the car could not have run with a broken belt. My nephew had a Honda CRX. He was pretty much idling through a parking lot and all the teeth stripped off at the bottom of the belt at the lower pulley. It immediately stopped. Ironically I just checked and his engine was an interference engine. Regardless I just replaced the belt and the car ran fine. One in a million?
BTW, I was poking fun at the Climate Change and Made in the USA threads many of us have participated in - I hadn't intended to give you a hard time about posting in "specifics."
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Originally posted by wittsend View PostTypically it is (or has been) 60,000 miles. However, California has some clause where new cars need to to go 100,000 miles before such service. At least on my 2000 Mazda Protege, 1.6 (non-interference thankfully) if it is a 49 state car the interval is 60,000 miles. If it is a California car it is 105,000 miles. Ironically it is the very same belt with two difference change intervals. So, it kind of begs the question do the other 49 stated really need to change the belt so frequently... - or are California cars pushing it to the extreme limit - with risks? Most belts are made off-shore (not USA made) and they are subject to climate change effects. Oh..., wait..., that's right this thread originated in the wrong section.
BTW, while we can only see the three first cylinders I see no strikes on the intake side. And the damage looks to be beyond just bending a valve. It looks more like a piston melt down. Given that the engine would have stopped nearly immediately I would expect to see sharp edged breakage on the piston.
The car drove to my house on three cylinders. its not locked up by any means. when I pulled the head off I found pieces of the valve that broke.
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Most belts are made off-shore (not USA made) and they are subject to climate change effects. Oh..., wait..., that's right this thread originated in the wrong section.
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Originally posted by rockne10 View PostAlmost all modern engines have a recommended mileage for a new timing belt.
BTW, while we can only see the three first cylinders I see no strikes on the intake side. And the damage looks to be beyond just bending a valve. It looks more like a piston melt down. Given that the engine would have stopped nearly immediately I would expect to see sharp edged breakage on the piston.
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Originally posted by rockne10 View PostAlmost all modern engines have a recommended mileage for a new timing belt.
Most belts are made off-shore (not USA made) and they are subject to climate change effects. Oh..., wait..., that's right this thread originated in the wrong section.
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Originally posted by rockne10 View Post[ATTACH=CONFIG]49960[/ATTACH].........
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The blinker fluid leaked out of my right front turn signal on my 59 Lark. Now it only comes on every so often.
On.........off...........on..........off...........on.............off. It's pretty consistent on timing though.
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