99 accord le timing belt

Discussion in 'Accord' started by Pamela and James Signa, Nov 12, 2006.

  1. Is there anyway to check and see if the timing belt has been changed?
    Pre-owned car.

    Thanks,,

    Pam
     
    Pamela and James Signa, Nov 12, 2006
    #1
  2. If the previous owner does not have a receipt for it, you must assume it has
    not been changed. If you think over the logic of how you would decide when
    to change the belt if you don't do it now, you'll find it gets terrifying in
    a hurry.

    There is another consideration; facing such a large maintenance expense and
    the poor likelihood of recovering the money when selling the car, many
    sellers sell the car when the belt is due. Funny how that works out.

    Mike
     
    Michael Pardee, Nov 12, 2006
    #2
  3. Pamela and James Signa

    duckbill Guest

    How many miles on your 99 Accord? Like my daughter's 98 Civic, I believe
    your belt is supposed to be changed by 105,000 miles or 7 years, which
    ever comes first. I replaced the Civic's belt at 99,000 miles and eight
    years old. Yes, it looked brand new was still tight. Remember what
    happens if that belt breaks! Hardly anyone changes their belts early and
    then sells the car.
     
    duckbill, Nov 14, 2006
    #3
  4. Pamela and James Signa

    TE Chea Guest

    | > Is there anyway to check and see if the timing belt has been changed?

    open the belt cover, see if belt looks new
    www.autozone.com/servlet/UiBroker?ForwardPage=/az/cds/en_us/0900823d/80/0c/f7/06/0900823d800cf706.jsp
     
    TE Chea, Nov 15, 2006
    #4
  5. A belt due for replacement should look like one that was changed a month
    ago; dusty and slightly scuffed from the tensioner. If you decide the belt
    looks okay, when will you change it? That is why it is mandatory to change
    the belt if there is any doubt. You get the security of having the new belt
    and you know when to change it next time.

    Mike
     
    Michael Pardee, Nov 16, 2006
    #5
  6. Pamela and James Signa

    TE Chea Guest

    | A belt due for replacement should look like one that was changed a month
    | ago
    Impossible, old belts's rubber is harder & has cracks.

    | If you decide the belt looks okay, when will you change it?
    Chk its appearance every 10k km

    | That is why it is mandatory to change
    | the belt if there is any doubt. You get the security of having the new belt
    | and you know when to change it next time.
    Fine if user can pay, either way see
    www.aa1car.com/library/2003/us70343.htm para 6
    2nd sentence is possible only with manufacturing defects, I think.
     
    TE Chea, Nov 16, 2006
    #6
  7. Absolutely not! If you see a belt with cracks it is seriously overdue for
    change. There is no reliable visual indicator for the condition of a timing
    belt. When I replaced the belt on my daughter's '93 Accord it was the
    original with 163K miles on it. There were no cracks or anything to indicate
    it had almost twice the mileage limit on it.
    Change it when it breaks? If the condition of the timing belt could be
    determined by visual inspection, Honda would tell us to inspect the belt and
    change it when it shows cracks. Instead they say to change it on schedule.
    The fact is that most timing belts that fail look fine, except the missing
    teeth or the place where it snapped.
    Nope - second sentence applies to normal everyday belts. That's why the
    visual inspection method is so dangerous. They just don't look bad before
    they fail - after all, it isn't the rubber that holds the belt together. I
    guarantee it's cheaper to replace a timing belt than to repair or replace an
    interference engine that has suffered a broken timing belt.

    Mike
     
    Michael Pardee, Nov 16, 2006
    #7
  8. We bought the car used, got a good price, and it has 120,000 miles on
    it. THe carlot seller does not know, or so one of them says, who they
    obtianed the car from to ask, however, the sales manager told me they
    knoew who owned it in a separate converstation about soemthing else. We
    will get it changed , just wondering if there was a way to tell.
     
    Pamela and James Signa, Nov 17, 2006
    #8
  9. Pamela and James Signa

    TeGGeR® Guest



    Probably got it at auction. One of those cars the new-car dealers didn't
    want (bad sign). He knows perfectly well who owned it last, just won't
    tell you.



    There is NO way to tell for sure. If you're unsure, get it replaced. The
    possible consequences of not doing it are rather dire.

    When I buy a used car that's within belt-change territory, I factor that
    price into my bargaining.
     
    TeGGeR®, Nov 17, 2006
    #9
  10. Nope - no way to tell. It really sucks, but I would bet heavily that at 120K
    miles the belt hasn't been changed. That's a big chunk of change the seller
    isn't likely to recover at sale time. Unless it was formerly owned by Santa
    Claus, you need to get it changed. Also change the water pump at the same
    time; a little extra now vs essentially the entire labor cost of a timing
    belt change if it fails later. And if the water pump fails by seizing, it
    will destroy the timing belt and you are back at teh wailing wall.

    Mike
     
    Michael Pardee, Nov 17, 2006
    #10
  11. I have a cousin that can do the work much less than an autoshop can, so
    I will pay him to do it. It was a new dealership that I bought it at,
    just on the used side of the lot. Thanks
     
    Pamela and James Signa, Nov 17, 2006
    #11
  12. In that case you may still have a bargain.

    Mike
     
    Michael Pardee, Nov 17, 2006
    #12
  13. Pamela and James Signa

    TeGGeR® Guest



    Oh, that's different. New car dealers tend to get the cream of the used-car
    crop.
     
    TeGGeR®, Nov 17, 2006
    #13
  14. OK thanks for all of your help.
     
    Pamela and James Signa, Nov 18, 2006
    #14
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