Quick question for those who have done Serpentine Belts
#1
Quick question for those who have done Serpentine Belts
I just changed out my belt, everything went smooth (I think). My question... Is the tensioner supposed to "spring" back? After I moved the tensioner with my wrench to get the old belt off, it stayed in the position I moved it to and did not spring back tight.
This may be fine... I put the new belt on and pulled the tensioner back to it's original position. It seems the tensioner is held in place by friction, which is fine, I just thought it was spring loaded.
Any insight out there? Did I do it right? The engine seems to be running great and is a lot quieter which is great.
Thanks
Matt
This may be fine... I put the new belt on and pulled the tensioner back to it's original position. It seems the tensioner is held in place by friction, which is fine, I just thought it was spring loaded.
Any insight out there? Did I do it right? The engine seems to be running great and is a lot quieter which is great.
Thanks
Matt
#2
The belt tensioner should spring back against the belt to keep pressure on it, how curroded is the tensioner ? could very well be that it either needs to be greased or replaced because you dont want to have that go out on you in the middle of no where.
but to answer your question, yes it should spring back on it's own you shouldnt have had to move it back to it's orginal positon
but to answer your question, yes it should spring back on it's own you shouldnt have had to move it back to it's orginal positon
#3
The belt tensioner should spring back against the belt to keep pressure on it, how curroded is the tensioner ? could very well be that it either needs to be greased or replaced because you dont want to have that go out on you in the middle of no where.
but to answer your question, yes it should spring back on it's own you shouldnt have had to move it back to it's orginal positon
but to answer your question, yes it should spring back on it's own you shouldnt have had to move it back to it's orginal positon
#4
#7
I would remove the tension again by putting a socket on the tensioner pulley bolt and turning clockwise. You should be able to release the tension enough to lift the belt off the alternator pulley and then release the tensioner. Get the belt away from the tensioner and then work the tensioner and spring with the socket wrench as your leverage. You should feel a pretty good amount of spring force on the tensioner. If you do not feel it wanting to spring back after working back and forth, there is something wrong with the spring. It is either seized, rusted, or broken. You could try applying some oil down in the spring, but keep the oil away from the belt and the pulley.
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