Re: Timing belt snappage on 99 civic
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Re: Timing belt snappage on 99 civic
| Elle | 26 Nov 2005 18:15 |
> Elle, this sensor is not on the distributor housing, its right in the path of > the timing belt under the timing belt cover. In the shop manual, they call > it the Crankshaft Speed Fluctuation Sensor. So, to clarify, did your first post have it wrong? Because you originally said it was the crank angle CYL sensor that the shop said needed to be replaced (though granted this is nowhere near the lower timing belt cover).
> I haven't been able to find it > on any of the parts websites out there including Majestic and San Leandro > Honda websites, or any after market ones. > > I have a JPEG of the affected part for clarity, but don't have anywhere to > post it. How do I send it to you? Feel free to mail it to honda.lioness@earthlink.net
I guess you already know that Majestic's and SLHonda's drawings and lists of items can be a little tricky. But I'll give it a shot, if you'd like some help.
I do not think my 91 Civic has this sensor, so my own manual won't help.
Meanwhile, I'll google a bit. Always fun to learn more.
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| T L | 26 Nov 2005 17:18 |
Elle, this sensor is not on the distributor housing, its right in the path of the timing belt under the timing belt cover. In the shop manual, they call it the Crankshaft Speed Fluctuation Sensor. I haven't been able to find it on any of the parts websites out there including Majestic and San Leandro Honda websites, or any after market ones.
I have a JPEG of the affected part for clarity, but don't have anywhere to post it. How do I send it to you?
t
>> does 3 bills for that sensor sound right? > [quoted text clipped - 39 lines] >T belts or any controversy over them. I am kinda doubting Goodyear being the >maker had anything to do with this. |
| Elle | 26 Nov 2005 16:56 |
> does 3 bills for that sensor sound right? [$300 (canadian?) for the CYL crank angle sensor on a 1999 Civic, 165000 km]
So that's about $257 American and about 102,000 miles.
The crank angle TDC/CYL sensors are installed on the distributor housing, so what they're doing (rightly, assuming the CYL sensor really is damaged) is replacing the whole distributor housing. Online OEM parts sites sell the housing for this Civic for about $233 American. A little more for labor sounds quite fair. The shop will switch over the old ignitor, coil, cap, and rotor to the new housing. Though you should consider a new cap and rotor at this point if your sis does not maintain this car well.
The better news is that replacing the housing anyway for a car with this many miles is not a terrible idea. The bearing on it often fails with age. (Well, it could last another 100k miles, too.) From my reading here and my own experience, many Honda owners end up with a new housing at some point in the mid-life of the car, though not due to the accident your sister's car had.
An independent shop "determined" that the cause of some non-start problems my 91 Civic was having around 140k miles was the way I had jury rigged the rotor to the distributor shaft. They told me the car needed a new distributor housing to replace the jury-rig fix, etc. Their diagnosis was wrong: about ten days later the car stalled again, and they found the problem was actually the ignition coil. Whence we had a few firm talk-through-your-teeth-and-try-to-keep-things-friendly words. But in hindsight, after reading more here, the new housing probably spared me problems further down the road.
If you're a junkyard addict, you can quite possibly get a real deal on a distributor housing.
Like you and others say, though, the bigger question is whether the valves were bent. I'd be talking to another shop to ask them what would be necessary to identify this, as I agree what this first shop is saying sounds fishy. Also, if this first shop is the one that put in the belt...
I am a pretty big OEM parts proponent these days (after learning the hard way a few times), but I don't recall seeing at online fora who makes Hondas T belts or any controversy over them. I am kinda doubting Goodyear being the maker had anything to do with this.
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| T L | 24 Nov 2005 23:47 |
Hi All
My sisters (poorly maintained) 99 civic with 165000kms has recently snapped the timing belt. Thought I would add some ammunition to the OEM vs nonOEM parts debate.
The belt has 60000kms on it. Its made by Goodyear. Its 3 years old. We are located in Winnipeg. And its not even cold yet.
Not only did it possibly ruin the valve train, it took the lower timing cover and the CYL Crank Angle sensor with it. (And they want to charge $300 for the sensor alone!) Total bill to put it back together = $700 at the dealership. Then we get to crank it over and see if the valves are bent.
Sounds a.s backwards to me, I told my bro-in law to suggest doing the clearance checks on the valves as is, but the dealership told him that wouldn't work.
Any ideas out there regarding this? Also does 3 bills for that sensor sound right? What about the valve clearance check?
Its not my car, so I am just doing this for info purposes. I drive a (much better maintained) 98 civic with 236000kms on it.
Thanks in advance. t
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