Yes yes another thread about DIY cambelt replacement, but before you stop reading please give me a few minutes to clarify something.
Now I'm a mechanic by trade and have done many cambelts in my time so the basic principle doesn't escape me. However I've always given the clios and meganes to a specialist as I hear so many horror stories and can't really be arsed to mess up my pride and joys.
However money is tight at the moment and the 172 is approaching a belt/dephaser change so I thought I'd research the job. I've looked through many old threads on here and to be honest I can't see the difficulty so someone please clear this up on what I'm missing!?
Basically the crank and camshaft pulleys are all floating once loosened off, assuming the TDC pin is in the flywheel and the camshafts are positioned with the horseshoe you literally can't get it wrong? Put the belt onto the floating pulleys, set the tensioner in the correct position and then lock off the pulleys by tightening them? Sounds simple.
I have all the locking and timing tools, albeit sealey variants, so is it safe to give this a shot or should I just cough up for a specialist? In theory it sounds a straightforward process for a competent mechanic?
Now I'm a mechanic by trade and have done many cambelts in my time so the basic principle doesn't escape me. However I've always given the clios and meganes to a specialist as I hear so many horror stories and can't really be arsed to mess up my pride and joys.
However money is tight at the moment and the 172 is approaching a belt/dephaser change so I thought I'd research the job. I've looked through many old threads on here and to be honest I can't see the difficulty so someone please clear this up on what I'm missing!?
Basically the crank and camshaft pulleys are all floating once loosened off, assuming the TDC pin is in the flywheel and the camshafts are positioned with the horseshoe you literally can't get it wrong? Put the belt onto the floating pulleys, set the tensioner in the correct position and then lock off the pulleys by tightening them? Sounds simple.
I have all the locking and timing tools, albeit sealey variants, so is it safe to give this a shot or should I just cough up for a specialist? In theory it sounds a straightforward process for a competent mechanic?