Login Register

Can you check a timing belt without taking it off?

Help, Advice, Owners' Discussion and DIY Tutorials on Volvo's stylish, distinctive P2 platform cars sold as model years 2001-2007 (North American market year designations).

2001 - 2007 V70
2001 - 2004 V70 XC (Cross Country)
2004 - 2007 XC70 (Cross Country)
2001 - 2009 S60
2003 - 2007 S60 R
2004 - 2007 V70 R

Post Reply
vtl
Posts: 4724
Joined: 16 August 2012
Year and Model: 2005 XC70
Location: Boston
Has thanked: 114 times
Been thanked: 605 times

Re: Can you check a timing belt without taking it off?

Post by vtl »

Rattnalle wrote: 26 Aug 2019, 14:59 How eastern? The VIDA recommendations are for the EMEA region which should include Eastern Europe.
East to Ural mountain. The dealer checks belt tensioner at 90 kkm already. It fails much quicker at -40C winters.

vtl
Posts: 4724
Joined: 16 August 2012
Year and Model: 2005 XC70
Location: Boston
Has thanked: 114 times
Been thanked: 605 times

Post by vtl »

- Pete - wrote: 26 Aug 2019, 21:57 THIS, for example, is an excellent set of tools and at $150-160 w/coupon it's got darn near every thing you'll ever need.
You don't need SAE for Volvo, plus Torx is everywhere in this car, so get a box of quality Torx bits, like OTC, that has both straight and plus sizes.
- Pete - wrote: 26 Aug 2019, 21:57 Lastly, driving super short trips on any of these vehicles leads to clogged PCV systems. Even at 48k, I'd be concerned for yours driving only a handful of miles per trip. If the engine can't get hot enough, it can't void itself of all the various gunk that ultimately results in "sludge" & clogged PCV systems. Ideally, these need to be run at temp (hot) for 15-20 minutes per drive cycle minimum. I kid you not, I recently (for “fun”) changed the orignial PCV system on one of our cars @279,000 and it was incredibly clean. Box was empty, top port was only occluded by maybe 1/12th it's aperture. I know this means nothing to you, but the car gets driven hard (not beating), and never for less than 15 minutes at a time. I know for a fact this is why the PCV system has remained darn near spotless all these years and miles. Running decent oil and changing it at 5k or less miles contributes to this.
Smart owner had this car running on PAO-based oil. B5254T2 breaks down any hydrocracked "synthetic" oil in 3k miles.

Plastic and rubber PCV parts still degrade and may crack, it is wise to overhaul PCV once in a while.

User avatar
abscate  
MVS Moderator
Posts: 35275
Joined: 17 February 2013
Year and Model: 99: V70s S70s,05 V70
Location: Port Jefferson Long Island NY
Has thanked: 1500 times
Been thanked: 3810 times

Post by abscate »

If you want a warranty repair of the engine to be a three- sigma event, which you do for both cost and marketing reasons, you will build in about 100% margin into the MTBF for the service interval.

Ozone and oil are the big belt enemies. If you drive the car like an adult in between the 2000-4000 rpm band, the timing gear will last way past the service interval.

My long term drivers all get changed at th service interval.
Empty Nester
A Captain in a Sea of Estrogen
1999-V70-T5M56 2005-V70-M56 1999-S70 VW T4 XC90-in-Red
Link to Maintenance record thread

User avatar
June
Posts: 2275
Joined: 4 May 2016
Year and Model: 2004 S80 T6,1991 740
Location: Arkansas
Has thanked: 523 times
Been thanked: 261 times

Post by June »

abscate wrote: 01 Sep 2019, 17:21 If you want a warranty repair of the engine to be a three- sigma event, which you do for both cost and marketing reasons, you will build in about 100% margin into the MTBF for the service interval.

Ozone and oil are the big belt enemies. If you drive the car like an adult in between the 2000-4000 rpm band, the timing gear will last way past the service interval.

My long term drivers all get changed at th service interval.
2000-4000? That's it??? :mrgreen: I don't want to grow up, I'm a VOLVO-R-US kid! :lol: :lol: :lol: June
My Volvo cars owned
1989 740 GLT ordered
1994 850 4door standard shift ordered
1996 960 ordered
1998 S90 ordered totalled after 3 weeks
1998 V70 GT dealer stock car
2002 S80 T6 ordered totalled
2004 S80 T6 dealer stock car and current car owned

User avatar
Rattnalle
Posts: 1674
Joined: 1 September 2017
Year and Model: 2004 V70 2.5T
Location: Sweden
Has thanked: 20 times
Been thanked: 133 times

Post by Rattnalle »

June wrote: 01 Sep 2019, 19:09
abscate wrote: 01 Sep 2019, 17:21 If you want a warranty repair of the engine to be a three- sigma event, which you do for both cost and marketing reasons, you will build in about 100% margin into the MTBF for the service interval.

Ozone and oil are the big belt enemies. If you drive the car like an adult in between the 2000-4000 rpm band, the timing gear will last way past the service interval.

My long term drivers all get changed at th service interval.
2000-4000? That's it??? :mrgreen: I don't want to grow up, I'm a VOLVO-R-US kid! :lol: :lol: :lol: June
Agreed. The fun starts at 4000 :D

vtl
Posts: 4724
Joined: 16 August 2012
Year and Model: 2005 XC70
Location: Boston
Has thanked: 114 times
Been thanked: 605 times

Post by vtl »

Rattnalle wrote: 01 Sep 2019, 23:08 Agreed. The fun starts at 4000 :D
Eh, the fun starts when the car sits on the belly and spins all 4 wheels in air :)

Post Reply
  • Similar Topics
    Replies
    Views
    Last post