Fitting a manual timing belt tensioner instead of Automatic
Fitting a manual timing belt tensioner instead of Automatic
Further to Weegie Steves post ( http://www.scottishelises.com/phpbb/vie ... 64&start=0) about changing his timing belt Elise parts recommend changing from an auto to a manual tensioner http://www.eliseparts.com/shop/index.ph ... cts_id=279 . Any issues I should know about before I do this before and order the bits? Thanks in advance .
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Exige Sport 350 (Sold)
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Evora S (sold)
Exige Sport 350 (Sold)
Elise Cup 250 (Air con and radio tubby spec) (Sold)
Evora S (sold)
Check the holes in your head (The car not your swede!)
I was looking at this but my head was not suitably drilled and tapped. I was going to tackle it but wimped out as the main oilway is right behind where you put the black and decker.....
Possible but I didn't bother for fear of writing off the head.
I was looking at this but my head was not suitably drilled and tapped. I was going to tackle it but wimped out as the main oilway is right behind where you put the black and decker.....
Possible but I didn't bother for fear of writing off the head.
1994 Lotus Esprit S4 - Work in progress
1980 Porsche 924 Turbo - Funky Interior Spec
2004 Smart Roadster Coupe - Hers
1980 Porsche 924 Turbo - Funky Interior Spec
2004 Smart Roadster Coupe - Hers
Your head won't have the right holes - I had to switch back to an auto tensioner when I put the standard head back into Mandy's
I'm just not that confident with a drill. One is fairly easy to do though - just don't go too deep, the other means widening the existing hole and retapping.
Mac
S2 Elise (cobalt blue with stripes) - toy spec
Caterham 7 - hillclimb spec
Yamaha Thundercat - 2 wheeled toy spec
Caterham 7 - hillclimb spec
Yamaha Thundercat - 2 wheeled toy spec
- BiggestNizzy
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The bolt diameter is different.
You won't get the thicker manual bolt through the thinner auto hole (and obviously the thinner bolt will just waggle around in the bigger hole (shug - you can "insert" some suitably smutty comment)
Mac
You won't get the thicker manual bolt through the thinner auto hole (and obviously the thinner bolt will just waggle around in the bigger hole (shug - you can "insert" some suitably smutty comment)
Mac
S2 Elise (cobalt blue with stripes) - toy spec
Caterham 7 - hillclimb spec
Yamaha Thundercat - 2 wheeled toy spec
Caterham 7 - hillclimb spec
Yamaha Thundercat - 2 wheeled toy spec
What he said. Just check it now and then if your worried. It will probably need resetting from time to time if you drive hard but remember they are designed to be ignored then replaced every cam belt change.
1994 Lotus Esprit S4 - Work in progress
1980 Porsche 924 Turbo - Funky Interior Spec
2004 Smart Roadster Coupe - Hers
1980 Porsche 924 Turbo - Funky Interior Spec
2004 Smart Roadster Coupe - Hers
Will do . As with many things Elise I appear to go in deep and find the simplest answer to be correct. I try not to hit the limitermac wrote:Alan,
Your probably best just replacing like for like.
I don't think there's any huge benifit unless your driving on the limiter for long periods of time.
Mac
No lotus
Exige Sport 350 (Sold)
Elise Cup 250 (Air con and radio tubby spec) (Sold)
Evora S (sold)
Exige Sport 350 (Sold)
Elise Cup 250 (Air con and radio tubby spec) (Sold)
Evora S (sold)
- BiggestNizzy
- Posts: 8932
- Joined: Sun May 27, 2007 6:47 pm
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HELP!!!!
You have me worried now I am getting a new head fitted on Monday (cheers Robinmac wrote:The bolt diameter is different.
You won't get the thicker manual bolt through the thinner auto hole (and obviously the thinner bolt will just waggle around in the bigger hole (shug - you can "insert" some suitably smutty comment)
Mac
Sent from my ZX SPECTRUM +2A
Does everyone agree this is an accepted way to tension a manual cam belt without the spring and bolt that is required? The manual it totally gash.
From a post on SELOC:
"Looking at the engine, pinch the belt on the right hand side about halfway between the crank sproket and exhaust pulley. You should now be able to rotate the belt through to 90° *just* . That is the correct tension. When fitting the belt start at the crank pulley - exhaust pulley then continue anti-clockwise through the inlet pulley, tensioner, water pump etc. "
From a post on SELOC:
"Looking at the engine, pinch the belt on the right hand side about halfway between the crank sproket and exhaust pulley. You should now be able to rotate the belt through to 90° *just* . That is the correct tension. When fitting the belt start at the crank pulley - exhaust pulley then continue anti-clockwise through the inlet pulley, tensioner, water pump etc. "
No lotus
Exige Sport 350 (Sold)
Elise Cup 250 (Air con and radio tubby spec) (Sold)
Evora S (sold)
Exige Sport 350 (Sold)
Elise Cup 250 (Air con and radio tubby spec) (Sold)
Evora S (sold)
I have no idea what that instruction is telling you to do - well I sort of do - but what does "rotate the belt through to 90 degrees" mean?
If you don't have the spring, fit the new belt and leave both the tensioner bolt and the backplate bolt loose (you may have to remove the backplate bolt all together in order to get enough slack on the tensioner to feed in the belt).
Once the belt is properly fitted all the way around, using finger pressure, push the backplate up to tension the belt and while under this tension, tighten backplate bolt to 10Nm, leaving the allen key tensioner bolt loose.
Now (having checked that all the timing marks still line up), remove the cam locking tool and rotate the engine clockwise (looking at crank pulley) two complete crank revolutions - best do this with plugs out and using just a 22mm spanner on the crank bolt - there is no compression so the engine should not go tight - if it does *STOP*.
Check the marks still line up after two revolutions. Now slacken the backplate bolt and apply firm pressure to the tensioner backplate (imagine how much pressure that little spring could apply - it's not *that* much), retighten to 10Nm then tighten the allen key tensioner bolt to 45Nm.
I would rotate two further revolutions to make sure the marks still line up, then put it all back together.
Cheers,
Robin
If you don't have the spring, fit the new belt and leave both the tensioner bolt and the backplate bolt loose (you may have to remove the backplate bolt all together in order to get enough slack on the tensioner to feed in the belt).
Once the belt is properly fitted all the way around, using finger pressure, push the backplate up to tension the belt and while under this tension, tighten backplate bolt to 10Nm, leaving the allen key tensioner bolt loose.
Now (having checked that all the timing marks still line up), remove the cam locking tool and rotate the engine clockwise (looking at crank pulley) two complete crank revolutions - best do this with plugs out and using just a 22mm spanner on the crank bolt - there is no compression so the engine should not go tight - if it does *STOP*.
Check the marks still line up after two revolutions. Now slacken the backplate bolt and apply firm pressure to the tensioner backplate (imagine how much pressure that little spring could apply - it's not *that* much), retighten to 10Nm then tighten the allen key tensioner bolt to 45Nm.
I would rotate two further revolutions to make sure the marks still line up, then put it all back together.
Cheers,
Robin
I is in your loomz nibblin ur wirez
#bemoretut
#bemoretut
I think he means twist the belt . The tighter the belt the less it will twist .
The service manual dscription I have is very poor for the manual tensioner so it must be really easy and I am making a big thing out of it.
Thanks for that Robin, thats clearer and I will do the job on Monday .
The service manual dscription I have is very poor for the manual tensioner so it must be really easy and I am making a big thing out of it.
Thanks for that Robin, thats clearer and I will do the job on Monday .
No lotus
Exige Sport 350 (Sold)
Elise Cup 250 (Air con and radio tubby spec) (Sold)
Evora S (sold)
Exige Sport 350 (Sold)
Elise Cup 250 (Air con and radio tubby spec) (Sold)
Evora S (sold)