hawkeye18
Sorta cares
Ok folks, story time again!
So I'm replacing a failed timing belt tensioner on my 94 ATX. I look in the factory pub and there's this whole big sequence about rotating the off-center pulley with a special tool and a torque wrench that gets no mention whatsoever in the SHOPP procedure. (Beth, you might want to add something about that in there... I'll send you appropriate pictures)
So this time, when I get to that point, I look at my tensioner pulley, and sure enough... it's rotated so that it's as far away from the belt as possible.
So how do I rotate this thing? There are what appear to be dracula bite marks on this thing; I can't get an allen wrench in there cos it's circular. I don't have the ford tool and have no idea where to get one that day... when all of a sudden an idea pops into my head...
I'm a solder tech in the navy, and one of the tools we use to form wires around a post terminal is a set of round-nose pliers:
Being that I do a lot of solder work on the side, and those are somewhat useful tools to have, I had purchased a set... at where else? Michael's. Yeah, the arts & crafts store. My wife keeps dragging me there for stupid stuff and I saw those there - they were like $4.99 so I got a set. I had had these for a year already, and they had never been used...
It turns out that those fit perfectly into the holes of the tensioner pulley, and the handles are short enough to use while the engine is in the car, even if you have big manly hands. And, it's quite easy to rotate the pulley to whatever position you need, and if you're by yourself it's a simple matter to slip that 14mm socket in there while you hold the pliers in place with your other hand.
I just rotated mine so that it was closest to the belt. This gives you more time on the belt, as the tensioner doesn't extend as far to give the same amount of pressure. And the less the tensioner has to extend, the less it goes bad...
Every ATX owner should have a pair of these. Now I'm gonna take my bad tensioner piston apart and see if there's any way to refurb these things... somebody's got to. There aren't any new ones, and the ones in use aren't getting any newer...
So I'm replacing a failed timing belt tensioner on my 94 ATX. I look in the factory pub and there's this whole big sequence about rotating the off-center pulley with a special tool and a torque wrench that gets no mention whatsoever in the SHOPP procedure. (Beth, you might want to add something about that in there... I'll send you appropriate pictures)
So this time, when I get to that point, I look at my tensioner pulley, and sure enough... it's rotated so that it's as far away from the belt as possible.
So how do I rotate this thing? There are what appear to be dracula bite marks on this thing; I can't get an allen wrench in there cos it's circular. I don't have the ford tool and have no idea where to get one that day... when all of a sudden an idea pops into my head...
I'm a solder tech in the navy, and one of the tools we use to form wires around a post terminal is a set of round-nose pliers:
Being that I do a lot of solder work on the side, and those are somewhat useful tools to have, I had purchased a set... at where else? Michael's. Yeah, the arts & crafts store. My wife keeps dragging me there for stupid stuff and I saw those there - they were like $4.99 so I got a set. I had had these for a year already, and they had never been used...
It turns out that those fit perfectly into the holes of the tensioner pulley, and the handles are short enough to use while the engine is in the car, even if you have big manly hands. And, it's quite easy to rotate the pulley to whatever position you need, and if you're by yourself it's a simple matter to slip that 14mm socket in there while you hold the pliers in place with your other hand.
I just rotated mine so that it was closest to the belt. This gives you more time on the belt, as the tensioner doesn't extend as far to give the same amount of pressure. And the less the tensioner has to extend, the less it goes bad...
Every ATX owner should have a pair of these. Now I'm gonna take my bad tensioner piston apart and see if there's any way to refurb these things... somebody's got to. There aren't any new ones, and the ones in use aren't getting any newer...
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