Brunoandrade98
Paid Member
Hi all,
A few days ago, I started changing my timing belt. I have a set of genuine locking tools with the "Horseshoe", pulley locking tool, and crank locking pin.
I figured it would be the "not easy, but doable" type of job, but I'm quickly reaching the conclusion that I might be out of my depth.
I've hit a snag where I can't get the horseshoe to slide into the camshafts after the belt is fitted, tensioned and the pulleys torqued to 30Nm (as per the manual) and after turning the crank manually twice.
After taking these steps, and attempting to fit the horseshoe, it simply won't slide in easily.
I've tried over and over by loosening the pulleys and re-tightening them with the pulley locking tool and horseshoe in place, but the result is always the same: the horseshoe doesn't slide in because the inlet camshaft is slightly over rotated counter-clockwise
The only way to fit the horseshoe after timing, is to fit it first into the inlet cam, and teasing it slightly clockwise, so that it fits into the exhaust cam.
I think the reason for this is due to tension by the valve springs, but I can't figure out how to counter this.
I'm too deep into this and can't really take the car to a mechanic, now.
Not only that, but where I live, there's not really a specialist I could take it into, either.
It appears I'm stuck with this.
I'll appreciate any tips or wisdom that might help me get this sorted myself.
If I fit it into the exhaust cam first, this is how far off it is:
A few days ago, I started changing my timing belt. I have a set of genuine locking tools with the "Horseshoe", pulley locking tool, and crank locking pin.
I figured it would be the "not easy, but doable" type of job, but I'm quickly reaching the conclusion that I might be out of my depth.
I've hit a snag where I can't get the horseshoe to slide into the camshafts after the belt is fitted, tensioned and the pulleys torqued to 30Nm (as per the manual) and after turning the crank manually twice.
After taking these steps, and attempting to fit the horseshoe, it simply won't slide in easily.
I've tried over and over by loosening the pulleys and re-tightening them with the pulley locking tool and horseshoe in place, but the result is always the same: the horseshoe doesn't slide in because the inlet camshaft is slightly over rotated counter-clockwise
The only way to fit the horseshoe after timing, is to fit it first into the inlet cam, and teasing it slightly clockwise, so that it fits into the exhaust cam.
I think the reason for this is due to tension by the valve springs, but I can't figure out how to counter this.
I'm too deep into this and can't really take the car to a mechanic, now.
Not only that, but where I live, there's not really a specialist I could take it into, either.
It appears I'm stuck with this.
I'll appreciate any tips or wisdom that might help me get this sorted myself.
If I fit it into the exhaust cam first, this is how far off it is: