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Car Forum / Kia Cars / April 2007

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timing belt

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dennislmccord@aol.com - 03 Apr 2007 12:58 GMT
i have a 1998 kia sephia looks like timing belt went about 60 mph is
this worth repairing and what other damage may have occured
KybonaWhogonna - 03 Apr 2007 19:44 GMT
>i have a 1998 kia sephia looks like timing belt went about 60 mph is
> this worth repairing and what other damage may have occured

===
If the valves have struck the pistons the enginge is going to require a
rebuilding. If this is the case I would junk it unless your going to do the
rebuilding and don't mind the cost.
Charlie Morgan - 03 Apr 2007 21:59 GMT
>i have a 1998 kia sephia looks like timing belt went about 60 mph is
>this worth repairing and what other damage may have occured

Recently had this happen on a high mileage (160k) Toyota Rav4 that I use to
carry crap back and forth to the boat. Despite all the scare stories, no damage
other than the belt. I had them replace the water pump, a couple of weeping
seals and the serpentine belt while they were in there. The repair bill was
equal to about 2 monthly car payments on a new car.

CWM
Phil - 05 Apr 2007 20:26 GMT
> Recently had this happen on a high mileage (160k) Toyota Rav4 that I use
> to
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
> was
> equal to about 2 monthly car payments on a new car.

You are comparing apples with oranges , belt failure on Toyotas doesn't wipe
out the engine , had one fail on a Camry , it just quit and coasted to a
stop.
Charlie Morgan - 05 Apr 2007 21:38 GMT
>> Recently had this happen on a high mileage (160k) Toyota Rav4 that I use
>> to
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
>out the engine , had one fail on a Camry , it just quit and coasted to a
>stop.

I don't believe that to be true. If the timing belt breaks on ANY engine, it CAN
result in valves meeting pistons. You and I were just lucky.

CWM
Phil - 05 Apr 2007 23:22 GMT
> I don't believe that to be true. If the timing belt breaks on ANY engine,
> it CAN

The tune up places can tell you if it can or not , the term I think they
use is 'free wheeling ' on Kias it  definitely WILL  , not luck involved.
Tim Lapin - 06 Apr 2007 16:13 GMT
> > I don't believe that to be true. If the timing belt breaks on ANY engine,
> > it CAN
>
>  The tune up places can tell you if it can or not , the term I think they
> use is 'free wheeling ' on Kias it  definitely WILL  , not luck involved.

The Kia engines, at least the Sorento engine, is an "interference engine".  
In those, the pistons and valves are so close together that when the belt
goes, the valves could find themselves in the "open" position while the
pistons are still cycling.  The resulting crash between the two will cause
severe damage to the engine.

Here are a couple of links which might help:
--------------------------------------------
->  http://www.cartalk.com/content/columns/Archive/2000/May/09.html

->  http://www.samarins.com/glossary/timing_belt.html

Signature

Tim Lapin
timl@sympatico.ca

--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com

Phil - 06 Apr 2007 16:55 GMT
> ->  http://www.cartalk.com/content/columns/Archive/2000/May/09.html

  One of my gotta listen to shows !
Speedy Pete - 12 Apr 2007 16:55 GMT
The 01 Rio I have was completely destroyed. New motor to fix it.

A leakdown test will see it valves were damaged. Removing the head will
let you know if it can be repaired IF there is damage.

-SP

> i have a 1998 kia sephia looks like timing belt went about 60 mph is
> this worth repairing and what other damage may have occured

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