I’ll present the situation chronologically so as to limit any wrong-headed ideas about causality that I may have. Some symptoms may be unrelated to others, which means you get to have fun playing “spot the red herring”.
The day before going on a 450+ mile freeway round trip this past weekend, I checked fluids, tires, etc. All was fine except I noticed that the serpentine belt was fairly worn. I ordered a new belt online (which will arrive in a few days), and since I had to make the trip regardless, I bought some belt dressing and sprayed a bit on the old belt, by way of “insurance.”
About 150 miles into the trip, the Check Engine light came on. Two fault codes were reported (via the one-button, one-light interface):
2-4-1 EGR system flow fault, and
3-1-4 Camshaft position sensor.
Assuming those to be emissions-related so not immediately critical, I continued on the trip and the car behaved fine otherwise.
On the return trip two days later, after driving ~150 miles and still ~80 miles from home, I heard a very faint chirping sound, like there was a small cricket in the glove box. I recall thinking, “Hmm, I wonder if that’s the beginning of the end of the serpentine belt,” as it was sort of a super quiet version of the loud squeal that a worn belt can make.
Only ten minutes later, while going 70 MPH, the engine suddenly lost all power. I might have heard a sudden noise, or maybe I imagined it, as the power loss was abrupt. As I coasted down a convenient offramp, I noticed that I still had dash lights and headlights – which suggests, I think, that the alternator should still be okay. But as I got to the bottom of the ramp, I noticed there was no power assist for brakes or steering.
I opened the hood thinking I’d find the serpentine belt in shreds. But no, it was still fully intact. Visual inspection revealed no dangling cables, nothing obviously loose or broken.
Then and now, when I turn the key to start the engine, I get whir or hum, but no cranking. So I still have battery power, the starter itself probably works(?), but it seems the engine is somehow locked up (I don’t want to say “seized” because that’s more specific than what this might be).
Looking at the Troubleshooting tips in the manual and in Haynes, I don’t see a set of symptoms that seems spot on.
Could the problem be electrical in some way? Failure of what component? What would fail so suddenly at speed?
Is it conceivable that, having sprayed a bit of dressing on the serpentine belt 350 miles before, the belt could somehow have seized (e.g., due to differential flexibility)? I don’t know how I can test this because I don’t know how to manually turn the motor – the car, now trucked home, can’t be easily rolled, as it’s in a low area that’s uphill in both directions. Should I try getting the front end on jack stands by jacking up one side at a time?
Is there anything I can try to “reset”? I tried clearing the fault codes but for some reason they won’t clear. In the past when clearing codes, it has sometimes taken me a few tries to get the button pressing right – the sequence and duration of presses can be tricky. But now I’m either doing something consistently wrong, or the computer somehow knows that something is wrong enough that it won’t let me clear the codes(!)
I can’t see the timing belt without opening its housing, but I don’t suspect it because it was replaced only 30,000 miles ago.
Any ideas on how I can better focus my thinking would be much appreciated.
I figure that in any case I should install the new serpentine belt when it arrives in two days. Hopefully by then I’ll know what I’m dealing with.
Thanks,
Kraig






