Why does Ferrari still use cambelts? | Page 2 | FerrariChat

Why does Ferrari still use cambelts?

Discussion in 'Technical Q&A' started by asianbond, Jun 28, 2006.

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  1. J.P.Sarti

    J.P.Sarti Guest

    May 23, 2005
    2,426
    The chain system proved unreliable in the early Dino many jumped time and crashed pistons, belts reduced weight and mass allowing higher rpm and better reliability
     
  2. davehelms

    davehelms F1 Rookie

    Jan 3, 2004
    4,629
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    Dave Helms

    The F50 uses a Morse type chain for the cam drive. Very tight, very accurate and VERY hard on the gears it rides on. F1 style "Sprint" engine vs street designed engine for the road cars. One is designed with 100k miles in mind, the other is not. Hell, the F50 only has one "gasket" used in the whole engine., everything else is O-ringed and Cooper ringed.
    High RPM with long term reliabilty requires belts given the technology that was available at the time. Prediction is that the chains will give way to belts again in the future. The simply transmit too much vibration to the valve train which doesnt work at high RPM.

    Dave
     
  3. Verell

    Verell F1 Veteran
    Consultant Owner

    May 5, 2001
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    So far just about everything (both questions & answers) that have been posted to this thread have been said several times before in the dozen or so cam belt threads, some of which have titles very close to this thread.

    Before posting to this thread, go search the archives & read them. Then, IFF you have something NEW to contribute feel free to post.
     
  4. Ricard

    Ricard Formula Junior

    Jan 23, 2004
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    Donington Park
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    Richard C
    2000 model year Honda S2000 = 120bhp per litre
    2000 model year Ferrari 360 = 111bhp per litre

    Current Audi S4 and RS4 have cam chains, had an S4 chain snap within 1000 miles from new...
     
  5. Ricard

    Ricard Formula Junior

    Jan 23, 2004
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    Richard C
    Or alternatively, if you are interested in this discussion then read the thread and contribute, if you know it all already then don't bother reading or posting...! sheesh...I thought this was a forum not a book.
     
  6. pistole

    pistole Formula Junior

    Jan 31, 2005
    771
    Malaysia

    amen.
     
  7. ROLOcr

    ROLOcr Formula Junior

    Oct 25, 2005
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    ROLO

    wrong, the new honda S2000 makes 240 hp out of a 2.1 liter engine, thats 109 hp per liter
    and a f430 has 490 hp out of a 4.3 L engine, thats 113.95 per liter

    they dosqueeze horses but not as good as ferrari
     
  8. Verell

    Verell F1 Veteran
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    May 5, 2001
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    So far it's a rehash of what's been said far too many times.
     
  9. Fred2

    Fred2 F1 World Champ
    Silver Subscribed

    Jan 2, 2005
    18,299
    nj

    A quick search found that:

    999cc Ducati 140HP
    1000cc Yamaha 175 HP
    1000cc Suzuki 178HP

    It looks like car technology has a way to go to catch up to the lowly motorcyle.
     
  10. Bullfighter

    Bullfighter Two Time F1 World Champ
    Lifetime Rossa Owner

    Jan 26, 2005
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    Jon
    Lol. Of course cars give you the option of not dying when you hit a piece of freeway debris...

    Regarding the earlier comments, I tend to agree with Artvonne that berating Ferrari for producing a high-maintenance machine is kind of misguided. When you buy a Ferrari, you're forsaking economical ownership for performance and design (a Ford Explorer body is cheap to stamp out and paint; an F430 is not, etc.) Belts aren't obsolete technology.
     
  11. ROLOcr

    ROLOcr Formula Junior

    Oct 25, 2005
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    ROLO
    remember that bike engines dont use a big flywheel(dont need that much torque to move a big body around), so less rotating mass,
    the can rev harder and faster,and have less vibration so the can REALLY squeeze hp's out of them without compromising
     
  12. dasMafia

    dasMafia Formula Junior

    Jun 9, 2004
    422
    Lincoln, Nebraska

    roflmao
     
  13. Ken

    Ken F1 World Champ

    Oct 19, 2001
    16,078
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    Kenneth
    Besides belts, chains and gears, there's other technologies around the corner for valve timing. 100% electronic systems with no cams or rotating masses for valve timing. In the next decade or two, that's where the cutting edge motors are headed.

    Ken
     
  14. miketuason

    miketuason F1 World Champ
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    Feb 24, 2006
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    My friend said his VW GTI uses a solenoid that pushes the valves up and down and everything is timed by the computer. Does this mean no timing belt? If so I think thats a heck of a Technology.
     
  15. TBond8

    TBond8 Karting

    Feb 7, 2006
    136
    CT,CA, Europe
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    Thomas
    As ha been said this topic has been talked about. But it seems that if the big question is why the belts do not last that long it is not that the belts are cheaply made. It is that we the owners do not drive our cars that often.

    People here are comparing regular road cars to their Ferrari. Most Honda owners will drive more in one year than some owners will drive their Ferrari in the whole time they one that particular Ferrari. With people selling their 360/430/550 etc... with only 1200 miles in a year. What do we as owners think will happen with rubber that gets used a lttle under a heavy stress load once in awhile and then at rest for long extended periods of time?

    I feel Ferrari has set the belt replacement as a time vs mileage as we don't drive nearly enough miles in our Ferraris. So Ferrari to protect itself set 3 years as the average life span of the belts. And dealers realize as do Independant shops that a damaged engine is far more costly and scary than a $5,000+/- bill for belts. Also every dealer be it Authorized Ferrari or not will ask if the owner has done the belts. If not then big reduction in what they will buy your car for.

    People here that are passionate about Porsches and compare Porsche to Ferrari drive their Porsches more than their Ferraris. Yes/No?

    How many owners here have owned Porsches?
    How many miles a year do you drive your Porsche?
    How many miles a year do you drive your Ferrari?
    How many miles a year do you drive your SUV/ Sedan etc..?

    All IMHO

    Thanks,
     
  16. davehelms

    davehelms F1 Rookie

    Jan 3, 2004
    4,629
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    Dave Helms

    Scroll the ENTIRE site and see if you can find a technical topic that has not been discussed in one form or another in the past.
    I have watched tallented, informative people driven off the site by this type of thing. I have never seen the merit in this type of post but I assure you that it will change my posting habits. Hell, there are those here that will take the time to make a post regarding someones spelling and grammer, to what end?
    Yesterday I visited a site that has the same format but is for Jeeps so I could find information regarding a problem on my daughters vehicle. Same topic discussed in an untold number of postings and headings and never a response of this nature. Yes, I did find the information needed and it did fix the Jeep. No, I never found the amount of discussion to be perplexing as each link brought up a slightly different view point that had merit and was worth investigating and discussing further.
    Brings to mind a quote my parents had hanging on the wall in the house I grew up in. My father, an engineer with the Apollo program (think they ever discussed a topic more than once?), taught me to reason things out before acting.

    "In physical science the first essential step in the direction of learning any subject is to find principles of numerical reckoning and practicable methods for measuring some quality connected with it. I often say that when you can measure what you are speaking about, and express it in numbers, you know something about it; but when you cannot measure it, when you cannot express it in numbers, your knowledge is of a meagre and unsatisfactory kind; it may be the beginning of knowledge, but you have scarcely in your thoughts advanced to the state of Science, whatever the matter may be."
    Lord Kelvin, 1883

    I for one have learned new things from this thread and compliment those that have posted before me.

    Dave
     
  17. Sfumato

    Sfumato F1 World Champ

    Nov 1, 2003
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    Llanfairpwllgwyngyll, Anglesey, Wales
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    Angus Podgorney
    Agreed, Dave, and well put.

    Less people here seem to do their own work, but are glad to advise those who do so. I lurk here, learn a lot, but all over this forum, the "slap down" is common. I started to post relevant searches when a repost pops. Have to post a repost .jpg too ;) , but at least it is a helpful post.

    My favorite, and the engine that made Ferrari what it is, is the Colombo 12, and it had chains. By the time the tipo 168 arrived, it was getting 280-320bhp out of 3L, in early 60's. Longevity from 1947 until 1968-9 with 5 LeMans wins seems to show impressive reliability, and many of the older, tired Colombo 12's I've seen and driven still run pretty well. I don't recall if they were interference engines, but I don't believe so. Still, impressive.

    I completely agree F-cars are NOT driven enough. Everyone seems to want a garage queen, but all of them, especially the cambelt cars, seem to run better the more you use them. Sitting in one spot with tension flatspots tires, and cambelts "take a set" too. Lots of miles or lots of heat cycles also beat up rubber, so tires can wear out in 7K miles due to sitting, or due to someone running very hard and cycling them to hard/brittle junk. Same goes for cambelts. I wouldn't drive on 5yo 1200mile tires, nor a cambelt.

    My 1.6 eurocents
     
  18. Verell

    Verell F1 Veteran
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    May 5, 2001
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    Dave,
    I've been a strong contributor to this site for over 5 years.
    I agree that almost any tech topic has at least 1 thread, some have more than, and most of those threads still aren't anywhere near exhaustive.

    However, the cam belt longevity topic has been discussed so many times from so many different angles that very few posts are non-repetitious. I didn't say new posts shouldn't be made, just that they should contain new information.

    Several times people have asked for a sticky cam belt thread. I think this is long overdue. It would be nice if all the cam belt threads could be merged into it.

    Sorry, but this particular topic has become a personal hot button.

    That's a great practice. If we don't get a sticky cam belt thread, then a collection of links to the previous threads should get posted as soon as the topic comes up again.

    Over the years, the general consensus has been change the belts every 5 years if it's a street car, 3 years if it's tracked, or the mileage limit is reached earlier.
     
  19. Verell

    Verell F1 Veteran
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    May 5, 2001
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    Here's a fairly complete list of the reasonably long threads discussing cam belt replacement whys & how-tos. I remember several more significant discussions of the topic, but don't know why my search didn't turn them up. However, it's a start at an Index:

    Why does Ferrari still use cambelts?
    http://ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=111403

    35,000 miles and 11+ years on belts!
    http://ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=97833

    308 Cam Belt broke..... anyone wanna help
    http://ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=86341

    308 Cam belts do Fail....
    http://ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=88755

    CAMBELT REPLACEMENT EXPOSED
    http://ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=64504

    308 Cam Belt Change
    http://ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=56702

    Cam Belt replacement
    http://ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=49430

    Change timing belt w/o open cam cover???
    http://ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=41307

    http://ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=41306

    Cam Belt Drive bearings
    http://ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=39746

    DIY Cam Belt Replacement
    http://ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=31477

    cam belt 7 years, 17K
    http://ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=19638

    Exactly How Do The 308 Cam Belts Fail And So What?
    http://ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=17246

    308 Cam belts do Fail....
    http://ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=88755

    308 Cam Belt Change
    http://ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=56702

    Broken timing belt questions..
    http://ferrarichat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=8602

    Old FerrariChat threads:

    How many YEARS between cam belt changes?
    http://70.85.40.84/~ferrari/discus/messages/256120/262132.html

    328 cam belts
    http://70.85.40.84/~ferrari/discus/messages/256120/211536.html

    Cam Belt Services
    http://70.85.40.84/~ferrari/discus/messages/251280/183142.html

    512tr cambelt quote
    http://70.85.40.84/~ferrari/discus/messages/251280/195827.html

    308 Cam Belts... cams wont rotate ?
    http://70.85.40.84/~ferrari/discus/messages/256120/241768.html

    Anyone ever had their cambelt/camchain snap?
    http://70.85.40.84/~ferrari/discus/messages/251280/173911.html

    328 cam timing belt replacement
    http://70.85.40.84/~ferrari/discus/messages/256120/186738.html

    Cam Belt Change-Food for thought
    http://70.85.40.84/~ferrari/discus/messages/251280/3298.html

    Replacing Cam Belts on a 79 308GTB
    http://70.85.40.84/~ferrari/discus/messages/256120/256536.html


    30,000 mi service/cam belts for 328
    http://70.85.40.84/~ferrari/discus/messages/256120/85786.html

    Cam Belts on 328 -- Mileage question
    http://70.85.40.84/~ferrari/discus/messages/256120/164788.html

    Broken Cam belt a service history concern?
    http://70.85.40.84/~ferrari/discus/messages/256120/277129.html

    08 cam pulleys & timing belt replacement
    http://70.85.40.84/~ferrari/discus/messages/256120/207152.html

    348: How many YEARS between cam belt changes?
    http://70.85.40.84/~ferrari/discus/messages/256120/262132.html

    Has anyone had first-hand cambelt failure experience?
    http://70.85.40.84/~ferrari/discus/messages/256120/199125.html
     
  20. davehelms

    davehelms F1 Rookie

    Jan 3, 2004
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    Dave Helms
    "Sorry, but this particular topic has become a personal hot button."

    Take a deep breath, have a cool glass of water.................. You have control of the mouse button, choose not to use it if you see "CAM BELTS" again. You will not have to look hard to find poor technical advise being given, try focusing your energy in that direction so the end result is a positive one. Does this advise sound familure? Use your search feature and you will see what I am talking about.

    Dave
     
  21. asianbond

    asianbond Formula 3

    Nov 8, 2003
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    Chris
    Of course certain topics are rehashed, but if people want to contribute what's the harm? If we follow your line of logic then there's not much else to discuss since I'm sure every topic has been touched on before.

    My initial question was why does Ferrari rubber cambelts require replacement in such short time and mileage time frame?

    It still has not been answered.

    Honda uses rubber cambelts that last much longer and spins just as high rpm. I don't buy the excuse because Ferrari are garage queens and need to be replaced every three years. Why does ferrari rubber cambelts only have 3 year shelf life?
     
  22. pistole

    pistole Formula Junior

    Jan 31, 2005
    771
    Malaysia

    good question.
     
  23. J.P.Sarti

    J.P.Sarti Guest

    May 23, 2005
    2,426
    I agree with Dave H, so what if a topic has been rehashed a 1000 times here, this is not an archive reference book, new posters and members here may have new info on this topic and older members may have also new info to contribute as well, otherwise this board will be come stagnante with old info.

    If anyone is tired of a topic don't participate or click the thread.
     
  24. Artvonne

    Artvonne F1 Veteran

    Oct 29, 2004
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    Paul
    Really? Its been answered so many times that its probably the MOST talked about thing on Ferrarichat.
     
  25. Sfumato

    Sfumato F1 World Champ

    Nov 1, 2003
    10,194
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    Angus Podgorney
    Again, as someone else posted, Ferraris aren't Hondas,and I suspect the material of the cambelt is similar if not the same, perhaps stronger in the Ferrari.

    It is not an excuse that inactivity damages cambelts. It is simply the physical characteristics of belts. You see seldom driven Hondas(like those at vacation homes, etc.) also break cambelts.

    Oxidation from ozone occurs whether or not the car is used, or garaged for that matter. The nylon/reinforcing fiber inside the rubber belts does try to remain in the shape it cools in, so if you run car until hot, then let it sit, the belt will try to maintain the shape of the position it cooled in. Until it warms up, this stresses the rest of the belt, which is why many cambelts break when cold, not hot.

    I don't understand what other answer you seek, but hopefully this has helped.
     

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