Bravo for you Heartbeat. I was actually going to post a response to osugrad97 myself and tell him that he was very disrespectful.
Well, geez, now that YOU think so, let me be the first to apologize.
Bravo for you Heartbeat. I was actually going to post a response to osugrad97 myself and tell him that he was very disrespectful.
One other question: pmartjr, how is it you have been on this board for 5 years and all of your posts have come on this topic? Near and dear to you heart, I assume? Sounds like it from your business experience.
Please do post on the radio's and door speakers. Its probably all been shared before but anyone thats been around these cars that long should contribute what they can.
Sorry for being a bit hard on you. Being from Ohio and all.
It's interesting I would think that with your experience and knowledge that you would be on the far other side of this debate like me.
And, I should not I am willing to wager that there are quite a few broken timing belts over the years that never got reported to this site. And thats just the folks ON this site. Think of the thousands of cars out there that aren't.
I don't know--but rather than the whole belt severing, a common failure mode is for a few teeth in a row to come off, which stops the show just as decisively. That's how the one timing belt I've ever broken failed (on a Toyota, at about 50% over the recommended mile limit).Sorry for chiming in late,but does'nt the timing belt have a fused or zippered portion? Am I wrong in thinking that may be the weak link.The rubber may loose elasticity over time but might not failure occure at the "seam".
The fact still remains that I have saved $3400 by not changing the belt every 6 years.
I'm not a Honda Designer, Engineer or Mechanic, so I stick with what the pros tell me.
So, the question is. How long can you really go w/o chaning the belt? The answer is: do you have enough money to replace the engine if you go past the schedule? Maybe only 1 in a 100 break? You want to be that 1?
I've done my best to stay out of this thread but this sentence has me curious.
If and when you do sell your NSX, will you be so proud to state this on your ad or will you just lie and say that the car has been maintained properly according to Honda's requirements?
Has anyone ever heard of a brand new timing belt failure following a replacement service? Could it happen?
I am the third owner of a 1991 that was first purchased from Jay Wolfe Acura, Kansas City, MO 11-16-90. I just had the timing belt / water pump and 60k service performed 04-25-09 for the first time in the cars history.
The car is over 19 years old with about 15,500 original miles. I have owned it for about two years and had both the intent and money to have the service done sooner but when I contacted the local service centers I was more afraid of letting them touch my car than I was of the timing belt breaking.
I became a member of prime and asked for help finding a service provider. The first member that responded basically told me that I was stupid and I should have thought about servicing my car before I bought it. I really like my car and wanted help. I received the help from another prime member.
My point is that people may have reasons for doing things that you don't agree with or understand. It's OK to voice your opinion but try to do it without making a personal attack.
yes, I've changed the main hoses, but still need to do the smaller hoes by oil filter and stuff like that.
You haven't yet explained the fact that the belts being installed are likely as old as the cars we are putting them on. If time is the critical factor, surely Honda is making new belts as we speak and scrapping all the ones in the warehouse. Seem logical to you?
Just bought an '02 with 14,600 miles on it. Was thinking about replacing the timing belt and water pump due to 7 year thing. Thoughts?