How long can I wait to replace timing belt?

Which engine does this car have? The gates guide (http://www.gates.com/brochure.cfm?brochure=2256&location_id=3487&go=TBHome) says the V6 is an interference engine, but the 4-cylinder isn’t. If yours is an interference engine, if the timing belt breaks the piston crashes into the valve, causing serious engine damage. It’ll make that $1000 sound cheap. If it breaks on I-95 it will stop running and, if an interference engine, make a terrible noise.

Unfortunately, there really isn’t any way to reliably inspect the timing belt, so you’ve got to change it on schedule. Maybe you’ll get away with putting off the repair, but it’s definitely a gamble and it WILL break sooner or later.

As for the price, it depends on your local labor rates and also on what else gets changed at the same time. On many cars it is an extremely good idea to change the water pump at the same time. When I lived on the west coast a lot of shops seemed to use timing belts as something of a loss leader, so calling around might get you a better price (although be sure you know what all they’re proposing to replace when you get estimates so you’re comparing apples to apples).

***How long can I postpone the repair? ***

Until the timing belt breaks. Which may be tomorrow or might be 2017

Is there a way to tell if the timing belt is worn or about to go?

Yes. It will break. (The non-fippant answer is “No”)

What happens if it breaks while I am on I95?

Your vehicle will coast to a stop and will not start again until you get it repaired. With towing charges and the “how are you going to take the work elsewhere” factor, the repair will probably cost more than your mechanic is asking and may be several thousands of dollars more if you have(had) an interference engine before you destroyed it.

What is a reasonable price for the repair?

If you replace it now $500 to maybe $1400. Depends on the vehicle, labor rates, and whether the water pump is replaced as well. Replacing the water pump when the timing belt is replaced is generally recommended, but strictly speaking, it’s optional.

Any other suggestions?

If you have tools, a place to work, and know how to use the tools, you may be able to do the job yourself. It is a fairly difficult job and not one I would recommend as a first automotive project. Other than that, you could/should get bids from several mechanics. Or depending on your situation, you could leave the car in DC and depend on the Metro, the NY subway and the Chinatown Bus (a cheap bus service between several NE corridor cities) for transportation.

Correction: Got my numbers mixed up. 4 is non-interference, 6 is interference

You probably went to the Toyota dealer in which case they’re going to talk you into replacing a bunch of other things in addition to the timing belt.

The belt itself is cheap. You can probably get a good one for $20 unless you go through Toyota, then you’ll pay a lot more. A mechanic could change the timing belt in 3 hours. Find out your mechanic’s hourly labor rate. If you shop around, you could have a new timing belt installed for $300.

BUT, at 100,000 miles, I’m guessing there are other maintenance items that should be done in addition to the timing belt.

You’ve been on borrowed time for the last 5 years and you’re also being given a bit of erroneous information.

When the timing belt is changed one always changes the belt tensioners, water pump, and any other belts that need it; no matter if it’s accessory belts, balance shaft belts, etc.
Failure to do that can easily leave you on the side of the road 2 weeks after the timing belt replacement with the options of having the car towed and repeating the job or having it towed and finding out the engine is destroyed (depending on make of car and engine).

A DIYer at home can perform a halfway repair and let the chips fall where they may. A competent mechanic should refuse to replace a timing belt only. It’s begging for trouble.

The only way to avoid this particular kind of repair is to do your homework before buying a car and spending your money on a car that uses a chain instead of a belt.

I just changed the timing belt in my Honda Odyssey for $15.00.

Why am I going to end up on the side of the road in 2 weeks?

You likely have the V6 motor, most Solaras have the V6.

You can postpone the repair as long as you want. Until the belt breaks the car will run fine. After the belt breaks is the problem.

No way to tell the condition of the belt as it sits now.

If it breaks when you are on I-95; the motor stops suddenly, your power steering stops when the motor stops so steering is possible but it is very much harder to turn the wheel. You’ll have power brakes to stop the car once, then the brakes will get hard and ineffective. You’ll have to get to the side of the road “coasting” traffic will have to dodge around you. If you are in the middle or passing lanes it could be difficult to get to the right side shoulder before the car looses all momentum. If you are on a bridge you might have very little to no shoulder at all for an emergency pull over. Once you get to the side of the road you aren’t going anywhere without a tow. So, you need to know the number for your AAA service, other road side service, or a local tow company.

When you get the car to a shop the V6 motor will have internal damage to valves and pistons and you will likely need to purchase a new or rebuilt motor and have it installed in the car. The old motor will be broken beyond a reasonable repair cost. You will be looking at about $3,000 to get the car on the road again.

Suggestion- replace the belt now. If you wish drive on, but be ready to buy another car when the belt breaks. If you can’t afford the cost of a new belt, I don’t know how you can afford to buy another car either.

I don’t think you can afford to wait. However, you can afford to find a better price for this job. I had this job done on my Honda Civic about two years ago for $550. $1,000 seems overpriced to me.

The Civic is much easier to replace the timing belt on than a Camry Solara with a V6. That’s why it’s more expensive. The OP probably can find a better price than $1000, though.

If you didn’t replace the belt tensioner, I wouldn’t count on trouble-free operation until your next timing belt replacement. I wouldn’t expect the tensioner’s design life to be any longer than that of the timing belt itself.

Did you replace the belt tensioner? If you didn’t, why not?

Agreed.

Old one seemed just fine. Same with water pump, etc.

Did I say that you were going to be sitting on the side of the road within 2 weeks? No.
I said that failure to do this CAN leave you on the side of the road within 2 weeks and many people have learned this the hard way.
Some years back my daughter bought a Mitsubishi in which someone had recently changed the timing belt sans water pump/tensioners. Six months later the water pump is puking coolant onto the new belt, which is now ruined and which I then had to redo properly.

One cannot always determine how good a tensioner bearing or water pump is by rotating it. Do some reading on metallurgy, metal hardening, etc. and it may help you to realize that once congealed, aged grease causes the hard coating to wear things can go downhill quickly.

A mechanic is expected to stand behind the work and the only way this can be done is by replacing those parts. You will also find with some research that is the proper and recommended method.

You can replace a crankshaft seal on a scored journal also. It may also wind up leaking 2 weeks later. Or new brake shoes on scored drums.

Question for you. Let’s say you took your Honda in and paid a shop to replace the timing belt. The tensioners and water pump were not changed. Two weeks later while tooling down the freeway a tensioner or water pump gives up, the belt snaps, and the engine is now trashed or semi-trashed; all depending.
Are you going to point the finger at the shop for not covering the bases?

I personally wouldn’t take that kind of chance on my own car, let alone someone else’s car.

In addition to the tensioner and water pump, there are thousands of parts in my vehicle that have a chance of failure in the next 300,000 miles. Should I change all the parts that could ever break down right now?

The OP probably has a limited budget and wants to change her/his timing belt at the lowest cost, and wants to know about options. He/she shouldn’t have to be bullied or scared into paying over $1,000 for the timing belt job. If tensioners and water pumps are truly maintenance items that everybody needs to replace after a certain number of miles, then the manufacturer should put that into the required maintenance schedule.

Consumers get bullied into buying too many things that they probably don’t need. In hard economic times, they should be given realistic choices.

Another suggestion is to sell your car, or trade it in, and get another car that is either brand new, or has a timing chain instead of a timing belt.

Then this won’t be an issue anymore.

Just make sure you sell the new car before the belt replacement point, if it has a timing belt.

BC.

I agree with Goldwing. Further…

The OP should ask everyone he/she knows if they have EVER owned a car that had a timing belt fail.

One part failing ruining an engine strikes me as poor design. Where is the Cartalk outrage?

Old one seemed just fine. Same with water pump, etc.

I bet the old timing belt looked just fine too, but you replaced it anyway. Sometimes age isn’t visible to the naked eye, at least not until it is too late. The timing belt kit for my car comes with a replacement tensioner.

IMHO, changing the timing belt but not changing the tensioner is like showering and putting on clean clothes each day but wearing the same dirty socks and underwear.

Goldwing, I mentioned it above, but I think it is worth mentioning again. The timing belt kit for my car (and probably your minivan) comes with a tensioner. I bet you saved a whole extra $15 by buying the belt by itself instead of the whole kit that comes with the tensioner. You didn’t save the $985 you implied you saved.

http://www.jcwhitney.com/jcwhitney/textsearch_result.jcw?sku=honda+Odyssey+timing+belt+kit&shopid=100001&_requestid=556919

At least if your timing belt breaks prematurely, you will know why it happened without tearing apart the engine.

Many replies state that a timing belt will break with no warning. Is this really true or are people simply saying that from lack of technical knowledge?

Is is possible that a timing belt will provide indications that it will fail in the near future? Is it possible that frequent visual inspections such as every 1000 miles will somehow reveal imminent failure? Is it be possible that a belt flexed backwards would show cracks on the tooth side that a good belt will not? Will there be some fraying at the edges several hundred miles prior to failure? Could the hardness of the rubber be checked with some kind of meter? Are there dimensional changes from new that could be useful?