this post was submitted on 05 Sep 2023
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As someone who works on vehicles a lot, not a profesional mechanic but have a couple older vehicles that I've been repairing and modifying including rebuilding the engine in one so far, I can say getting belts to cooperate and go where they're suppose to is often one of the most difficult and frustrating parts of repairs. There's most of the time very little room to get to where you need to and the belts are tight even when they have as much slack as possible. This weekend I replaced a timing belt, water pump, motor mount, and serpentine belt on my fiance's car and ignition coil packs, and dropped a gas tank to replace a fuel pump on a coworker's truck. When I was putting the serpentine belt on my fiance's car I got frustrated with it and moved on to something else for a little bit and then when I had nothing else except the belt and reattaching stuff that would be in the way of the belt, I went back to fighting with it. Especially for doing your first vehicle repairs you're likely missing tools that would make the job way easier so you're essentially doing the job on hard mode so getting as far as you have is still a major accomplishment. Some advice though, before you get the belt on go back over all the bolts and try to make sure they're as tight as you can get them. Without having a torque wrench to make sure they're as tight as they're suppose to be it's difficult to tell if they're fully tight especially if you've been fighting with it and are physically worn out at the time. I've had times where I tightened bolts as much as I could but was so exhausted I didn't have the strength to get them tight enough but didn't realize it at the time.
Hey, thank you so much! Yeah, the mechanic that's coming tomorrow is paid by the hour, so I'm going to have him check all the bolts for me, cause yeah, I am a bit worried the vibration from driving every day will loosen the bolts if it's just my strength that's tightened them.
Thanks for the words of encouragement, I appreciate it.
All bolts in a vehicle have a torque spec from the manufacturer. You can find these in the service manual that you may be able to buy from a dealership, or in a Chilton or Haynes manual for your car. Once you know the torque spec you can use a torque wrench (you should be able to rent one from an auto parts store) to make sure the bolts are tightened down just right.
Also next time I'd suggest using blue LocTite on the threads of your bolts. This acts as a mild "glue" to keep bolts from backing out. That can be found in any hardware or auto parts store as well