John Howard
New CEG'er
Help, timing belt advice needed!
Okay, when I took off the valve cover of my 1995 GL 2.0 and put the alignment bar on the camshafts at TDC, the bar went into the exhaust camshaft slot, but not quite into the intake camshaft slot. Then I marked the old timing belt in three places on the belt and pulleys and transferred the marks to the new timing belt.
Today I put the new timing belt on. Again the alignment bar went into the exhaust camshaft slot but not into the intake. At first I said, "Leave it, that's the way it was." But then I thought why not try it one tooth over? So I did that and the alignment bar then fit into both camshaft slots with a little fiddling.
Would you guys go with the new position or the old position of the intake camshaft? The old belt was put in at 122,000 miles by a Firestone Tire Service company, not a Ford dealership. Did they get it one tooth off? My gut says leave it in new position, but I'm kind of afraid to. What would you guys do?
Another thing. The car has not idled right since I bought it 20 years ago, although it runs fine at highway speeds. Might one tooth off affect the idle? I want to think the alignment tool is the bottom line, but is it really?
Again, what would you guys do?
Thank you.
Okay, when I took off the valve cover of my 1995 GL 2.0 and put the alignment bar on the camshafts at TDC, the bar went into the exhaust camshaft slot, but not quite into the intake camshaft slot. Then I marked the old timing belt in three places on the belt and pulleys and transferred the marks to the new timing belt.
Today I put the new timing belt on. Again the alignment bar went into the exhaust camshaft slot but not into the intake. At first I said, "Leave it, that's the way it was." But then I thought why not try it one tooth over? So I did that and the alignment bar then fit into both camshaft slots with a little fiddling.
Would you guys go with the new position or the old position of the intake camshaft? The old belt was put in at 122,000 miles by a Firestone Tire Service company, not a Ford dealership. Did they get it one tooth off? My gut says leave it in new position, but I'm kind of afraid to. What would you guys do?
Another thing. The car has not idled right since I bought it 20 years ago, although it runs fine at highway speeds. Might one tooth off affect the idle? I want to think the alignment tool is the bottom line, but is it really?
Again, what would you guys do?
Thank you.