Oh no.....not another tread about Timing Belts...... | FerrariChat

Oh no.....not another tread about Timing Belts......

Discussion in '308/328' started by Tokyo Drftr, Jun 15, 2009.

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  1. Tokyo Drftr

    Tokyo Drftr Formula 3

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    #1 Tokyo Drftr, Jun 15, 2009
    Last edited by a moderator: Jun 15, 2009
    Well for my own edification, i have been in liaison with the engineers at dayco learning about their serpentine belts. Specifically for ferrari. I am not wishing to extend TB intervals, as more than the belts are of concern, ie brgs. But i really wanted to know if belts will fail due to old age with no signs of outward wear. These are a few of the replys i was sent. By the way, these people are very informative and always recommend following the Manufactures recommendation. As i.

    First reply from dayco

    "You didn't specify what type of belt you are asking about, but I will
    assume you mean a serpentine ribbed belt. Any timing belt should always be
    changed per the manufacturers recommendations.

    The materials used in today's serpentine belts typically have longer life
    in the drives than in years past due to the use of specially compounded
    EPDM rubber. It is much less likely to crack due to heat and aging than
    the previous neoprene materials.

    It is impossible to say categorically how long belts on your Ferrari should
    last in the limited driving situations you are using it in. I think you
    have a couple of options on how to best deal with the question. The first
    option would be to replace the belt (or belts) every three years,
    regardless of mileage. This is likely the most conservative approach and
    the belts would likely look and perform just fine. The other way involves
    inspection at least once per year of the rib side of the belt. If you see
    lateral cracking in the ribs or the rubber seeming to become brittle, you
    should probably replace them. The belts would tend to still perform just
    fine for some time with limited cracks on the ribs, but they are clearly
    aging. A very conservative measure would be if there are more than 1 crack
    per foot, replace.

    Also, make sure the belt is never exposed to any belt dressings. Some
    people think this is good for the belt (quiet running, softening the belt,
    etc.). This practice never has been a good idea in the past, and with the
    EPDM materials it is even worse.

    Happy motoring in your Ferrari."

    Next reply to internal failure possibility without any outward signs...........

    "Our serpentine belts are made with a specially treated and twisted
    polyester cord. I have yet to see one fail due to cord fatigue before
    showing other signs (cracking or pop out of the cord through the sidewall).
    If you see any cracks or cord fraying on the edge, it definitely should be
    replaced. The most frequent initiation of failure is cracking of the rib
    side."
     
  2. mike996

    mike996 F1 Veteran

    Jun 14, 2008
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    Interesting article.

    Also, as he stated, belt dressing has always been the worst possible thing you can do to a belt or any rubber part in an effort to "fix" it. It just makes it degrade a lot faster.
     
  3. Tokyo Drftr

    Tokyo Drftr Formula 3

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    #3 Tokyo Drftr, Jun 15, 2009
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    To me, it is irrelevant when to change the belts, i only wanted to feel confident when running it up hard. I wanted to be able to visual verify the conditions of a belt and be more assured of its overall integrity. Doing belts is no big deal, gets easier each time.
     
  4. rolindsay

    rolindsay Formula 3

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    My Mondial QV 'broke' a cam belt at about 2000 rpm, not at high speed. I was told that the high speed valve train motion is much smoother than at low engine speeds where the belt is jerked as each cam lobe contacts its valve. FWIW, the belt didn't break. Rather, about 10 teeth sheared from the substrate. Upon close examination of the belt - now held in my garage as constant reminder and a source of encouragement - the edges of many more of the 'teeth' show the beginnings of shearing away. The failure, which occurred at the small diameter drive pulley, was sadly complete predictable; with 20/20 hindsight. $9000 spent nine years ago, to repair the engine.
     
  5. Tokyo Drftr

    Tokyo Drftr Formula 3

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    That makes sense, concering valve train loading. I had a big block ford in a drag car early in my youth which broke a cam. It broke at idle.
     
  6. SonomaRik

    SonomaRik F1 Veteran


    Thanks for posting, however, the bolded above has me some comfort and concern.

    According to mfgr, = 3 years, which is also their recommendation anyway[/]...Ferrari or other, as a conservative. One could say, it's to generate money for the belt mfgr, but they seem to be more in the zone with 3 years anyway....interesting to those that doubt the 3 year rule: and we know we'll hear from them...

    But 'limited driving conditions'??? what did you tell them? Did you mention types of driving or duration or frequency? Not sure how to take this other than go with the conservative approach even in the best of 'limited driving'.

    Now what bothers me is their 'visual inspection of the lateral cracking' which they say, if I read correctly, 'will tend to perform for some time': wow, how scientific and conclusive is that?!!?!!

    Didn't say on a high revving engine or other stress that 'some time or should perform' would not present failure. I'm sure most here if seeing ANY cracking would replace right away even over the age minimum...know I would.

    Lastly their last sentence, is failure if cracking on the rib side.

    Hmmm, just saying I don't see how their recommendation of 'will tend to perform for some time', equates to caution when reading that last sentence.

    Rik
     
  7. rolindsay

    rolindsay Formula 3

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    Rik, et al., I read some of that article to be intended for non-interference engines. Break a belt on a non-interference engine and it will leave you stranded. Break a belt on an interference engine and it will leave you stranded AND BROKE. Trust me on this one. I wrote the repair check!
     
  8. GrayTA

    GrayTA F1 World Champ
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    I thought that Ferrari Belts were originally supposed to last 5 years...with the "older" technology belt (think 1980s). But then I know they had the report out a few years ago stating every 3 years...with the "new" technology belt.

    So, if belt technology is getting better and more reliable, why would we have lost two years between belt changes??

    Thats my question....



    PDG
     
  9. tuttebenne

    tuttebenne F1 Rookie

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    And that's why this won't be the last thread on timing belts !
     
  10. Rifledriver

    Rifledriver Three Time F1 World Champ

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    #10 Rifledriver, Jun 15, 2009
    Last edited: Jun 15, 2009
    His entire statement was about serpentine belts, not timing belts. Their design, construction, application and purpose is very different.

    Don't mix apples and oranges.

    If you are going to title a thread about timing belts and waste all the bandwidth at least make it about timing belts and not serpentine belts.
     
  11. Tokyo Drftr

    Tokyo Drftr Formula 3

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    Your correct. TB are comprised of a completely different material than serpentine. Was having senior moment.
     
  12. ernie

    ernie Two Time F1 World Champ
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    From what I read in the Dayco replay I think they thought you were talking about the accessory belts? That's the alternator, a/c, water pump, and if you have them, the power steering and smog pump belts. On my car (348) my timing belt has teeth not ribs. So if you could ask them about how long a toothed (if that's even a word?) cam belt should last that would be good.
     
  13. Dr Tommy Cosgrove

    Dr Tommy Cosgrove Three Time F1 World Champ
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    I think their advice in the first paragraph of their response says all we need to know.
     
  14. Etcetera

    Etcetera Two Time F1 World Champ
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    I am going to buy all the belt manufacturers on this planet and shut them all down so in the future there will be no more belt threads.
     
  15. CliffBeer

    CliffBeer Formula 3

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    Kinda hard to talk about belt life without also talking about bearing life.... The teeth sheer off the belt because something (seized tensioner bearing or cam bearing, for example) puts an excessive load on the belt.

    Personally, my cars live in a moderate climate, are driven regularly but with modest miles (less than 3,000/yr.), and sit in a secure and heated garage so I'm good with 5 years or 15,000 miles, whichever occurs first. But that's just me.
     
  16. SoCal308GTSiQV

    SoCal308GTSiQV Formula Junior

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    Anyone make a gear drive set up to replace the belts all together?
     
  17. tuttebenne

    tuttebenne F1 Rookie

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    Living this nightmare right now. My son's '87 Maxima suffered a tensioner bearing failure on Friday. I'm almost down to the bare block and am hoping against hope that I am not looking at a hole in one of the pistons. I know there is valve damage and no compression in one cylinder but there is so much metal in the number 6 hole that I am getting a little sick as the unveiling approaches - tonight. We talk so much about belts we neglect the tensioner bearings. In my opinion you shouldn't change one without the other, unless you are changing belts because they were nearly new but got contaminated. A new tensioner for this Maxima cost $50 !!!! but the last mechanic didn't change it when the belts were done !!!!!!! :-(
     
  18. 2000YELLOW360

    2000YELLOW360 F1 World Champ

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    I have the solution: junk all of the cars that have belts. Buy 430s and it's replacement, put the old bodies on the new chassis. Dont' tell anyone you did that. Or if that doesn't work, just swap the engines. Probably cheaper in the long run with a big block chevy, or a 430 engine in an older body. If you figure 10k per belt service, you'd pay for the entire project in 10 years or so.

    LOL

    Art
     
  19. Rifledriver

    Rifledriver Three Time F1 World Champ

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    $10,000 for a belt service? Art you been robbed. Did they use a gun to collect the bill? Even Jesse James doesn't charge that much. In this case on 308 or 328 you can probably get 6 or 7 belt changes for ten grand.
     
  20. Verell

    Verell F1 Veteran
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    That can be the case. However, the trapezoidal belt teeth used in the 308/328 also shear because the corners of the teeth are high flex & high stress areas between the relatively rigid raised tooth and the relatively flexable low portion of the tooth. That's why the belt mfg's adopted the curved tooth profile which has much smoother stress distribution. The advantages of the curvilinear tooth design are well documentated in the Gates catalog.

    2000YELLOW360,
    I'll be happy to do your belt service for $9K, saving you $1k. ;)
     
  21. Rifledriver

    Rifledriver Three Time F1 World Champ

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    I have repaired quite a number of cars where the teeth were just sheared off leaving the circumference of the belt intact with no mechanical failure causing it. It is the standard failure mode. The shear strength of the teeth of the belt are what delivers the driving load and when they are old enough the rubber no longer has the strength to deliver it. The belt is MUCH stronger than the teeth themselves.
     
  22. JoeZaff

    JoeZaff F1 Veteran
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    Question:
    I know everyone focuses on belt design, but isn't the "premature" wear on these belts not really a function of the belt quality, but the engine design, loads, etc, which cause the belts to wear at an "accelerated" rate. People always say, my Toyota belt lasted ten years. Isn't that really apples to oranges though?
    Maybe, like the 2nd gear when cold issue, some engines are more prone to "premature" belt wear than others?

    I don't know the answers to these questions, but it seems everyone focuses on the belts themselves rather than the engine design.

    Any thoughts?
     
  23. Rifledriver

    Rifledriver Three Time F1 World Champ

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    #23 Rifledriver, Jun 18, 2009
    Last edited: Jun 18, 2009
    You are correct but try telling that to an internet expert. Not too many belt drive cars out there operating 48 valves with rather stiff springs and steep ramps on belts that has to modes, long periods of inactivity or driven at 9/10ths. Also not too many cars out there operating 40 valves that spin up to 8500 as quickly and have to accelerate all those parts that quickly in the extreme heat of a 360 engine compartment. Not too many cars out there that are owned and driven for the express purpose of beating the crap out of the motor every time it is driven. The simple fact is most want to believe you really don't need to pay to maintain your toy and Ferrari is just trying to screw you for the benefit of a dealer that they really don't care if he lives or dies.

    Its all very laughable for those of us who know the truth of the situation but what do I care? I make a lot more money fixing broken cars than maintaining good ones.
     
  24. SonomaRik

    SonomaRik F1 Veteran

    #24 SonomaRik, Jun 18, 2009
    Last edited: Jun 18, 2009
    so of course the inverse or conservative approach is a means to prolong a belts life, like not redlining it and just, well, cruisin' ....with some 'sprited driving' in-between. Of course not ignoring the published change schedule.
    r
     
  25. JoeZaff

    JoeZaff F1 Veteran
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    Another interesting point Brian made is the tremendous heat in the engine compartment. I never really thought about it, but in the mid-engine cars, the engine compartment gets scorching hot. Much hotter than any other car I have ever owned. The effect of that heat reeks havoc on other rubber and plastic components in the compartment over time from what I have been told and shown. I can't imagine it not having an effect on the belts as well.

    As for your point, I THINK whether you drive it conservatively or not, the engines very design puts more stress on the belts than a typical belt drive car. Add to that the engine heat, infrequency of use, etc, and it all would seem to add up to a shorter interval schedule. Ferrari engines, it appears, where not designed with low maintenance costs in mind, hence, it appears that appropriate care requires more frequent belt changes.
     

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