INA are the ones i had that rattled! (some had Dayco belts) - hence why i avoid
yup, but they still rattled!
god this forum is getting tedious.
yeah and we still don't know why they rattled, i'm still blaming the cambelt tensioner, THE ONLY difference was the INA kit the tensioner lined up at 1 o'clock, powergrip they lined up at 11-12 o'clock
weird, but you have been warned, £4K i'm out of pocket there
^if pro mechanics can f**k it up i wouldn't support your comment!
Its not hard really, but it ain't no k-series!
I am a "pro mechanic" and I paid to have it done, stick to what you know, if you don't know f4r and it's timing/cambelt procedure don't touch it, o how I wish it was a k series
Yep, that'll be the banjo bolt for the dephaser pulley and dont forget to fit those new oil seals that come in the bag to
Inlet cam bolt = 100Nm, Inlet cam nut = 30Nm + 86 degrees (+/- 4 degrees).
Yeah seperate. Is it worth takin the bolts back and swaping for the kit or just get the sealsDid you buy the cam pulley nut and bolt seperate then as Renault do a service kit containing everything you need bar the crank pulley bolt.
How do i torque the stud???Yep, that'll be the banjo bolt for the dephaser pulley and dont forget to fit those new oil seals that come in the bag to
Inlet cam bolt = 100Nm, Inlet cam nut = 30Nm + 86 degrees (+/- 4 degrees).
How do i torque the stud???
There is no stud to torque, the stud is factory fitted to the exhaust camshaft, you never touch that. Just torque the nut on the exhaust cam, and bolt on the inlet cam.
As for part numbers, the service kit is: 7701471629 and the crankshaft pulley bolt is: 8200557644
As much I am for people working on their owns cars and trying things for themselves, it doesnt add up to do it yourself. I'd like to think i'm competant enough to tackle most jobs but here is my main point when it comes to the f4r. To do it yourself, your are going to be spendiing over £400, buying tools and parts. Spend a fraction more and have a specialist do it and you get it done for you and you have a come back (and obv safe knowledge of it being done correctly). Its a lot of pain in the arse to save a little amount of money.
I payed Renault to do it because I didnt want to travel as the car was 2 years overdue the belt or I would have been happy to part with my cash at any of the specialists.
As much I am for people working on their owns cars and trying things for themselves, it doesnt add up to do it yourself. I'd like to think i'm competant enough to tackle most jobs but here is my main point when it comes to the f4r. To do it yourself, your are going to be spendiing over £400, buying tools and parts. Spend a fraction more and have a specialist do it and you get it done for you and you have a come back (and obv safe knowledge of it being done correctly). Its a lot of pain in the arse to save a little amount of money.
I payed Renault to do it because I didnt want to travel as the car was 2 years overdue the belt or I would have been happy to part with my cash at any of the specialists.