T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1348.1 | Of course, I am very likely to be wrong on this | CRATE::RUTTER | Rut the Nut | Mon Jan 28 1991 12:00 | 12 |
| � diesel estate broke - the engine stopped immediately - luckily I
^^^^^^^
� what is the likelyhood of valve/piston damage as I believe the pistons
� on the Peugeot are "dished".
I thought that diesel engines used very high compression ratios,
which would involve smaller chambers (wouldn't they ?).
If this is the case, I would expect piston damage, although I have no
idea what the combustion chamber shape/design is like.
J.R.
|
1348.2 | update | KERNEL::PETTET | Norm Pettet CSC Basingstoke | Tue Jan 29 1991 00:34 | 17 |
| The local Peugeot garage took the rocker cover off today. The cam
shaft is in 3 pieces. The senario seems to be the cam belt broke
leaving 1 valve in number 2 cylinder, the piston hit the
valve which instead of bending broke the camshaft at the lobe and
middle bearing support. The garage have said it would take 4-5 hours
to remove the cylinder head (a claim I strongly dispute) and it
would make more sense to just replace the engine at a cost of 2000
pounds. I suspect they aren't prepared to repair the existing engine
and an option swap is quicker. I told the garage I would seek a second
opinion at which point they said it would only cost 60 pounds to
remove the head (this obviously isn't 4-5 hours work). The garage
said they have my best interest at heart but this seems to be
defeatism and how to make a fast buck/pound. I now have a certain
distrust of the garage!! I'll post another update shortly
Cheers....Norm Pettet
|
1348.3 | Black belt - Ah so! | KERNEL::LOUGHLINI | | Tue Jan 29 1991 09:50 | 29 |
| A similar thing happened to the strife's 1985 Escort (CVH 1.3 Engine)
the other week. The timing belt snapped as she pulled up at a road
junction. I was horribly confused when I rolled up in my car to
try and get it started. There was no fuel nor sparks - incredible
for two faults to occur at the same time!! Being truly "stumped"
I had no option but to tow it round to the local garage. The guy
peered into the oil filler 'ole whilst I turned the engine over
and instantly shouted "that'll be 250 pounds please!" It turns out
that when the timing belt snaps everything stops, ie fuel pump,
distributor, chuckle chocks, knacker thrashing plates, etc, etc.
This is a very common problem on this particular Ford CVH Engine.
Anyway, the good news is that it hadn't damaged the valves/rods, as
per note .0. According to the garage guy this was only the second
time in his considerable experience (he's quite old) that a broken
belt had not effectively written-off the engine. We only got charged
the cost of fitting a new timing belt and adjustments, etc., around
35 pounds.
The moral of this story is that timing belts must be replaced according
to the service book, at 36000 miles in the Ford case. The alternative
can be VERY expensive unless you're lucky. I admit that I did not
replace the belt (I do the normal servicing) since it looked "OK"
and didn't appreciate the importance of it. Perhaps the Haines manuals
should highlight "essential" work from your normal "preventive"
servicing tasks.
Ian
|
1348.4 | | ANNECY::MATTHEWS | M+M Enterprises. Thats the CATCH | Tue Jan 29 1991 10:34 | 13 |
| re: .3
The same happened to a friends 1.3 Escort. Again, no damage to the
engine. I can only assume that the valves don't get that close to
the piston at TDC.
re: .2
2000 sounds rather a lot to pay. A rebuild should be less than 1000
I would have thought, although I didn't read the note which mentioned
which car is was.
Mark
|
1348.5 | | COMICS::WEGG | Some hard boiled eggs & some nuts | Tue Jan 29 1991 10:38 | 15 |
| Re .3
I wonder how many other people have suffered this. Fortunately, when
the belt went on my Escort I had only had the car a month, and I
claimed the cost of the damage from the garage that sold it to me.
The damage occurs, of course, because as the belt disintegrates
it starts to slip and the camshaft gets out of synch with the
pistons. You were obviously lucky enough for the belt to fly off
suddenly at just the right moment. Very rare.
Re .2
What garage is this, Norm? (Is it approximately 25 miles south of
where you work with the initials W-S?)
Ian.
|
1348.6 | 250 quid mate | YUPPY::ELLAWAY | | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:16 | 11 |
| The same happened to me about three years ago on my XR3i but I
was'nt so lucky it actually cost me 250 quid to get most of the
valves replaced.
The garage said it was to do with the water pump seizing as this is
driven by the cam belt. I think Ford actually changed the spec for
the mileage before camshaft belts should be replaced.
Regards
Martin
|
1348.7 | | CHEST::RUTTER | Rut the Nut | Tue Jan 29 1991 13:35 | 3 |
| � where you work with the initials W-S?)
Would this refer to a garage 'chain' which now has the initials W-K ?
|
1348.8 | TLA | KERNEL::PETTET | Norm Pettet CSC Basingstoke | Wed Jan 30 1991 00:27 | 17 |
| ref .5
Ian,
your starter for 10 The garage initials are C-G
Anyway they are taking the head off today after I got a second opinion
(the maximum time to take the head off is 1.5 hours!!) depending
on what they find will determine whether they fix it or another
garage. I'll keep you all posted, in the meantime thankyou for your
replies. I think the moral of this story is change your cam belt
every 30000 miles regardless what it says in the handbook.
Cheers....Norm Pettet
|
1348.9 | let this be a warning..... | KERNEL::PETTET | Norm Pettet CSC Basingstoke | Thu Jan 31 1991 01:01 | 24 |
| Update
------
The garage took the head off today. The verdict is:-
1) Every valve has hit its associated piston
2) Each piston has movement (number 2 piston can be turned 1/4
inch so suspect little end/pins and piston require replacement
3) The cylinder head is cracked
4) Camshaft broken in 2 places
5) The bores are OK however
The cost of parts + labour to repair is 1700 pounds The garage
(after a little persuasion) agreed to put in a new engine for 1800
pounds.
The moral of this story is ALWAYS replace your cam belt at 30,000
miles regardless of what it says in the handbook. It may cost you
100 pounds to replace but failure to do so (as I found out) is a
hell of a lot more expensive.
You have been warned!!!!
Norm
|
1348.10 | | EXIT::BOOTHE | Karen Boothe | Thu Jan 31 1991 10:18 | 8 |
|
When does the handbook say the cam belt should be changes in the Peugeot ???
Karen
(whose a bit nervous 'cos my 205 XLD has done 50,000 miles and the
cam belt has not been changed)
|
1348.11 | | WARNUT::HARRISC | Not very nice at all | Thu Jan 31 1991 14:27 | 6 |
| Re -1
I think the Ford Escort engine is more susceptible to this than the
Peugeot, but at 50,000 I would consider getting it replaced!
..Craig
|
1348.12 | | NEWOA::VANDIK::HENNEMAN | Reality? - not today thanks | Thu Jan 31 1991 14:34 | 5 |
| Alfa used to recommend replacement every 35,000 miles on the Boxer engine and,
suprisingly for Alfa Romeo, the belts were dirt cheap and it only took 30 mins
to replace them both.
Dick
|
1348.13 | | UKCSSE::RDAVIES | I can't tryp for nots | Thu Jan 31 1991 16:53 | 5 |
| I have heared some rumours about this happening on 309's and BX's, but
never seen first hand evidence. If your concerned check with your
dealer!.
Richard
|
1348.14 | after 35,000 - get it checked | KERNEL::PETTET | Norm Pettet CSC Basingstoke | Fri Feb 01 1991 00:10 | 10 |
| ref .10
According to a couple of garages I've contacted the cambelt
should be changed before 50,000 but there doesn't seem to be any
hard and fast rules regarding when. After my experience I would
recommend you get it checked ASAP, the cost of replacement is about
100 pounds- cheaper than a new engine :-)
Cheers....Norm Pettet
|
1348.15 | BX - Pug: no VW - yes | HOO78C::DUINHOVEN | Weird scenes inside the colemine... | Fri Feb 01 1991 12:04 | 12 |
| About BX and Peugeot's: Never heard of it.
I have drive BX diesel and drive a 16 TGI now, not trouble.
One of my previous cars had this problem though.
I have had the camshaft slip one tooth, so the valves were
ticking againgst the pistons after driving the car downhill when
speeding to Hull (I like to prevent arguments on missing hills in
Holland). The VW Passat 1500 CC diesel did not like to driven 100 M/h.
It did no do any harm, garage readjusted the timing and all went well.
Hans
|