new boot joints and rubber burning odor

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by faith20879, Apr 4, 2008.

  1. faith20879

    faith20879 Guest

    Hi,

    This is about a 1997 Honda Civic. I just had all 4 boots replaces
    yesterday but there is a rubber burning odor from under the hood. The
    mechanic said to just keep driving it. My question is what could be
    the cause and would there be permanent damage if I keep driving it?

    Thanks,
    Faith
     
    faith20879, Apr 4, 2008
    #1
  2. faith20879

    jim beam Guest


    what kind of boots? driveshaft? steering rack? suspension joint?
    spark plug? more importantly, what kind of mechanic and what was the
    problem?
     
    jim beam, Apr 4, 2008
    #2
  3. faith20879

    faith20879 Guest

    Hi Jim,

    Thanks for your reply.

    I believe they are for the driveshaft. A couple of months ago, I took
    the car in for the 75,000 mile checkup and the dealer said the boots
    were a little cracked and needed to be replaced pretty soon. I then
    called around and found this garage that charges a little less. They
    are the mechanic division of a well known body shop in my area.

    Thanks,
    Faith
     
    faith20879, Apr 4, 2008
    #3
  4. faith20879

    Tegger Guest

    wrote in 8g2000hse.googlegroups.com:

    A rubber burning odor under the hood is often a slipping accessory drive
    belt. Better get them checked. Your guy should have done that before
    telling you to ignore it.
     
    Tegger, Apr 4, 2008
    #4
  5. faith20879

    jim beam Guest

    ok, but this should not cause burning rubber smell.

    my thoughts are that tegger is probably correct, a slipping accessory
    belt can indeed be the cause of this smell. but i'm still suspicious of
    the necessity of the work you had done because if it was not done right,
    given that one of the driveshaft boots is near the exhaust, a driveshaft
    may not be seated correctly and be touching and burning.

    my caution is because the outer driveshaft boots do indeed crack, but
    the inner ones hardly ever. in fact, i have 18 year old oem driveshafts
    in my crx, and while the outer boots have been changed, the inner ones
    are still great, and there is no reason to compromise them unless
    they're broken in some way. they don't have to flex much in use so they
    don't crack the same way as the outer joint boots. they never get
    exposed to the sun either. for a shop to recommend the inner boots as
    well as the outer is mostly inexpert job creation.
     
    jim beam, Apr 5, 2008
    #5
  6. faith20879

    faith20879 Guest

    Hi all,

    This is an update. BTW, I learned the boots are for the CV joint. I
    could see them under from bending over the engine. Sorry about the
    wrong info I gave out earlier.

    I took the car back to the shop Monday morning. The guy apologized
    profusely and promised to get it right. By the evening, after he put
    in a new set of boots, tightened up whatever were loose before, gave
    me a free oil change, and took it for a road test, he declared the car
    was now problem-free.

    On the way home the car was fine. But Tuesday the rubber burning
    smell returned, though not as strong. I first smelled it through the
    vent when stopped at the traffic light. I thought maybe it was the
    residual but it persisted after 50 miles and 24 hours.

    I took it back to the shop again this morning. The guy again
    apologized profusely and said he couldn't think of what to say except
    to take another look.

    I left the car there but I have no confidence on this guy now. What
    would you do?

    Any opinion will be greatly appreciated!


    Faith
     
    faith20879, Apr 9, 2008
    #6
  7. faith20879

    motsco_ Guest

    -----------------------

    Most Hondas will dribble a bit of oil on the exhaust pipe when the oil
    filter is removed / replaced. You should LOOK to see if you can tell
    where the smoke /smell is coming from.

    The more times you give it to him, the more chances he has of really
    messing something up.

    'Curly'
     
    motsco_, Apr 9, 2008
    #7
  8. faith20879

    Tegger Guest

    wrote in :


    Did he check the accessory drive belts to see if they were slipping? Did he
    check any of the pulleys/idler wheels to see if they were seizing up? Those
    two are common sources of rubber burning smells.
     
    Tegger, Apr 10, 2008
    #8
Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments (here). After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.