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On Jun 15, 11:24*am, Smitty Two wrote:
In article , *DerbyDad03 wrote: This question is about the decision process involved with replacing the timing belt in a vehicle "now" or "later". Let's not confuse the issue with cost or voiding warranties, etc. Let's assume there is no warranty to deal with and that the cash is readily available, both now and later. Here's the situation a friend and I were discussing the other day: The manual - and therefore the dealer - says the timing belt on his vehicle should be replaced at 90K, which is right where he's at. He called around to various repair shops for a price and multiple places told him "I've never seen a timing belt go on that vehicle before 110K. The dealers just want their money early. There's no need to replace it at 90K." He was even able to "verify" that opinion on the web. OK, so let's say that you are planning to keep the vehicle for the foreseeable future, probably well beyond 110K. That means that you will need to replace the timing belt, probably in about a year, to be safe. So here's what I was thinking: There's a pretty slim chance that you'll keep the vehicle for the full life of the second timing belt. That would put you in the 220K range. Even if you replaced it at 90K and it really will last 110K, that's still pushing 200K. Why would you wait until next year and not replace it at 90K? Even at the dealer's "accelerated" schedule, you're good until 180K, by which time you'll probably have gotten rid of the car, so why not be *extra* cautious and replace it now? Thoughts? If the valves crash on that particular vehicle, replace now. If it's your only vehicle and having it break down would pose significant inconvenience, replace now. Otherwise stretch it out a bit if you feel like it, but since cash is available, what's the point of delaying? So you can boast in the barroom about how much smarter you are than the engineers who designed the car and specified the maintenance schedule?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - While I am of the "do it at 90K" opinion, no one has addressed the fact that more than one independent repair shop - one of which I recommended because they've treated me right in the past - said to wait. Why would they give up a job - and risk their reputation - when they have every "right" to just point at the manual and say "replace it at 90K"? Why push off a job now that they might not get a year from now? |
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