Had my cambelt slip a couple weeks back. Been researching everything since then.
Spoke to dan@sjm who was very helpful and mentioned most of the time the valves bend and a new head/engine required. Signs that the aux had frayed, catching in the crank pulley, resulting in the slip.
To cut a long story short, had a colleague come to look at the car. He's adamant the timing is out, but not enough to cause contact with the valves. We started it up and it does indeed run on 4 cylinders (previously thought 3) and rev cleanly. It was down on power when I pulled over after the breakdown though.
It doesn't sound that bad. Sounds similar to when the dephaser is knackered (as far as I can tell from a million YouTube videos).
My plan has been to start fault finding from cheapest to most expensive. My next job is getting tools and reseting the cambelt and possibly changing the dephaser, then if not, I'll remove head and potentially get a new head/engine fitted depending on the damage.
This is how the cams are sitting at TDC.
If someone can tell me that angle will definitely knacker the valves, then I'll skip straight to removing the head. Estimated at between 10-20 degrees out.
If not, I'm going to re-time with a new belt and crank it over (pending advice on below), if not I'll fit a new dephaser and see if it's any better. Probably compression test from here and move on to finally replacing head/engine.
My other question is, is it possible to 'break' the dephaser from the cambelt slippage?
Can I also run the car if timed correctly with a broken dephaser?
Cambelt kit, dephaser and aux were all changed last year.
I'm happy to crack on and do this because I've got nothing to lose at the moment and know the risks.
Also learnt a crap-load from this, feel so much more confident jumping in and troubleshooting myself now.
Sorry about the massive wall of text!
Thanks
Spoke to dan@sjm who was very helpful and mentioned most of the time the valves bend and a new head/engine required. Signs that the aux had frayed, catching in the crank pulley, resulting in the slip.
To cut a long story short, had a colleague come to look at the car. He's adamant the timing is out, but not enough to cause contact with the valves. We started it up and it does indeed run on 4 cylinders (previously thought 3) and rev cleanly. It was down on power when I pulled over after the breakdown though.
It doesn't sound that bad. Sounds similar to when the dephaser is knackered (as far as I can tell from a million YouTube videos).
My plan has been to start fault finding from cheapest to most expensive. My next job is getting tools and reseting the cambelt and possibly changing the dephaser, then if not, I'll remove head and potentially get a new head/engine fitted depending on the damage.
This is how the cams are sitting at TDC.
If someone can tell me that angle will definitely knacker the valves, then I'll skip straight to removing the head. Estimated at between 10-20 degrees out.
If not, I'm going to re-time with a new belt and crank it over (pending advice on below), if not I'll fit a new dephaser and see if it's any better. Probably compression test from here and move on to finally replacing head/engine.
My other question is, is it possible to 'break' the dephaser from the cambelt slippage?
Can I also run the car if timed correctly with a broken dephaser?
Cambelt kit, dephaser and aux were all changed last year.
I'm happy to crack on and do this because I've got nothing to lose at the moment and know the risks.
Also learnt a crap-load from this, feel so much more confident jumping in and troubleshooting myself now.
Sorry about the massive wall of text!
Thanks