Make sure your car actually has a timing belt, and not a timing chain. Timing chains don't need to be changed.
Make sure your car actually has a timing belt, and not a timing chain. Timing chains don't need to be changed.
I'd rather be swimming...biking...running...and eating cheesecake...
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2008 Cervelo P2C Tri bike
2011 Trek Madone 5.5/Cobb V-Flow Max
2007 Jamis Coda/Terry Liberator
2011 Trek Mamba 29er
Actually, chains do need changed. It just happens later mileage-wise. Not changing a timing chain is a bad, BAD idea. And the chain tensioners need changed with it.
But they're fairly rare in normal everyday cars so you're probably dealing with a belt.
"I never met a donut I didn't like" - Dave Wiens
A tarp is on the top of the car to keep the snow, now rain out. So far the insides are dry. Going to be funto put the tarp on every day until the sunroof leak is fixed. And I've sucked it up and accepted that I'm going to have to get the timing belt, water pump, and brakes repaired. Here's my credit card.
- tad of background... once upon a time, when I lived in Phoenix, and was married, husband dearest didn't think the routine maintenance schedule recommendations in the owners manual needed to be kept. Of course it was summer, when - the cooling system failed, the engine block cracked, and the transmission melted in my Baby Bronco. All the money we saved for a vacation went to pay for the repairs. I would have been better off if I shoved the truck off a cliff. So now I stick to the maintenance schedule, and knowing my 8-yr old car that has 93,000 miles on it needs parts replaced. Am not happy about it, but understand that the work needs to be done. Sure beats having the timing belt break, things seizing, and needing to buy a new engine.
Beth
Don't fret over it too much. We all have to do car maintenance just like on our bike. I know it sucks when you have to dish out the money tho. It's kinda funny to me how Seattle points out all the little leaks you have in your car though, I went through the same thing when I lived there.I was lucky mine was the gasket around the front windshield (no sunroof) and I put silicon on it and it was fine. My 'new' car is now 20 years old and still running. Having new valve seal gaskets put on next weekend and the oil changed but if you take care of it you will have you car a long time. My car now has 175,000 miles on it; I'm keeping my fingers crossed for 225,000!
If this freaking weather would cooperate I could just ride my bike!