Helped a supporter do the timing belt on a Volvo S60, turned into a real job. - HOWR

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  • čas přidán 2. 09. 2023
  • P2 Timing belt: • Timing belt & water pu...
    Cam seals: • Replacing the cam and ...
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    Visit my Website for special tools, parts for sale and other helpful information: www.RobertDIY.com
    Help Robert, help others: / robertdiyafterdark
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Komentáře • 40

  • @stevehilliard1495
    @stevehilliard1495 Před 10 měsíci +7

    Good job in explaining the process

  • @slawomirVLOG
    @slawomirVLOG Před 10 měsíci +4

    Hi, Im from Poland. I have v70 and this is my 5fh volvo. I love your content!

  • @Twobarpsi
    @Twobarpsi Před 10 měsíci

    Very complicated and intricate repair! Your experience with these cars really shined through here.

  • @bernardaflores1720
    @bernardaflores1720 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Great video!

  • @stevemccooleq
    @stevemccooleq Před 10 měsíci +2

    These cars are safe and comfortable but you cannot mistake them for Corollas or Civics. Lots of maintenance and always something to fix on them.

  • @AwakeDude911
    @AwakeDude911 Před 10 měsíci +1

    when the shop did my belt /water pump $600 labor plus i brought FCP parts for them to use as it will throw codes if its set wrong and this is a job for the very VERY advance person , no i can change my plugs or do a brake job that wont work here !
    the cams were marked before the belt was removed (on the head) and after the cams moved after the belt was removed so 2 marks per VVT hub ... i see it and have done the belt and water pump in my S70 but this is a much harder job as you need to lock the cams and mark EVERY THING on the S60 .the S70 you just line up the marks and lock nothing down just unbolt and go to work. the S70 like a 2 1/2 job the S60 like a 5-6 hour NOT FUN job

    • @RobertDIY
      @RobertDIY  Před 9 měsíci

      Easy for this job to go south. Lots of fun interaction after that. LOL

  • @donmoore7785
    @donmoore7785 Před 5 měsíci

    A hydraulic floor jack is a very flexible and useful tool. Did you add as much flat material as the space allowed, prior to jacking? Also, you can jack in stages, using a jack stand at an intermediate point, and add material under the jack then. You can't expect it to be a direct replacement for the Volvo jack at the jack points. My Indy mechanic studied YT videos to learn the proper procedure to do the timing on my '05 V70 2.5T with two VVT hubs. Looks like you tried a "hit or miss" method.

    • @RobertDIY
      @RobertDIY  Před 5 měsíci

      No, I just didn't lock the cams.

  • @aleskyfinis1025
    @aleskyfinis1025 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Love 💙👮‍♂️

  • @chriskeep9461
    @chriskeep9461 Před 10 měsíci +1

    it would suck to tell them you have to take it to the dealer. nice guess. lucky not 2 degrees the wrong way. Its pretty stressful changing timing belts. think how many mechanics had to buy a new engine.

    • @AwakeDude911
      @AwakeDude911 Před 10 měsíci

      new USED engines at the salvage yard is like $3-4 hundred dollars so its not going to break the bank and in 6 months to a year the junk yard motor blows up thats on you ! nobodys going to give you a brand new engine.

    • @RobertDIY
      @RobertDIY  Před 9 měsíci

      It take a little more than that to bend valves but it is scary.

  • @nestordupo845
    @nestordupo845 Před 3 měsíci

    I always watch your videos just wondering when you put those locking tools at the back why you could rotate those spracket back and port? Are those spracket sopose to not moving too when its lock at the back?

    • @RobertDIY
      @RobertDIY  Před 3 měsíci

      The VVT hubs have a little play/movement.

  • @helipad4050
    @helipad4050 Před 10 měsíci +3

    I think my 1998 s70 has a similar leak, not as bad, not sure if i should have replaced the seals when i did my timing job about a year ago. I am new to working on cars so i have no clue what im talking about. not sure if it could be a pretty bad problem or not.

    • @helipad4050
      @helipad4050 Před 10 měsíci +1

      also this month been doing a head gasket replacement on my 1994 volvo 850, i traded for it from a friend. the heater core had exploded in 2018 and he gave up on trying to fix it because he couldnt findout why it was drinking coolant so quickly. i replaced the heater core after i got it. it had misfires and bad compression, it was also blowing smoke out the exhaust so i checked the cylinders and they were clean. so i figured it was a blown head gasket. the head gasket looked fine so i took it to a machine shop to level the head they said the all the valves were leaking. might have been warped as well. im hoping it isnt a cracked block, it might be. id be really sad if it is.

    • @chriskeep9461
      @chriskeep9461 Před 10 měsíci

      I can't think of any scenario where a cracked block would cause smoke. just oil and coolant mixing.
      Its very hard to tell oil smoke from antifreeze smoke. probably just a high milage head problem and bad valve stem seals. for some reason the na seals on the early 850 go bad and over heating hurts them. valve job.@@helipad4050

    • @AwakeDude911
      @AwakeDude911 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@helipad4050 usually $300 for a valve job and like $80 to deck the head ,with all parts and machine shop work and you doing the WORK putting it back on the car (new water pump and timing belt,head bolts cam seals THINK FCP EURO as well) about $700 buck will get it back up on the road again OR you can pay $2900 for a shop to do it for you! my 98 s70 (same 850 motor) burnt a valve so ive been there in 2016 ..in 2023 after 3 owners it still sit on my same block right now with close to 300K on the block as they are usually pretty hard core solid, and it had cross hatching in the cylinder walls at 180k that looked new !

    • @helipad4050
      @helipad4050 Před 10 měsíci

      @@AwakeDude911 thats cool, im glad im doing the right way

    • @RobertDIY
      @RobertDIY  Před 9 měsíci

      Oil leaks usually get worse.

  • @josephstevens4032
    @josephstevens4032 Před 10 měsíci

    Easier than a timing chain job.

    • @RobertDIY
      @RobertDIY  Před 10 měsíci +1

      you can say that again.

  • @coolantkid3428
    @coolantkid3428 Před 10 měsíci

    What coolant was used when refilling? Looks like it may be universal extended life, which is a good choice.

    • @AwakeDude911
      @AwakeDude911 Před 10 měsíci

      i use G O 5 from advance auto in my old s70 and newer S60

    • @coolantkid3428
      @coolantkid3428 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@AwakeDude911 Oh man, you don't want that in your system. That and the OEM Volvo coolant contain silicates, which destroys the water pump seal and bearing, and borates, which destroys the heater core. This is why you see Robert changing out so many heater cores on these cars. Also, those nasty silicates coats the entire system like a thermal blanket and reduces heat transfer efficiency, the last thing you want on these hot-running engines. I strongly suggest you drain, remove the thermostat and flush with water from a garden hose into the thermostat housing, then refill the system with either Peak Global Lifetime or Napa 1EXT, which coincidentally is on sale at the moment. You do this and you can count on no water pump, heater core, or any other cooling system issues.

    • @RobertDIY
      @RobertDIY  Před 9 měsíci

      What vehicles run this coolant you are married to? I have opened a lot of these coolant systems and if it has Volvo coolant in the system, it has been spotless clean. Water pumps last 20+ years with over 250,000 miles. I've seen some water pumps with more than 500k on them. A lot of these cars run all mixes of coolant in them because people add all kinds of junk that auto part stores sell them anything.
      I guess my question to you is... do you have a Volvo and if so, does it have your coolant in it and how many miles with no coolant system parts replaced?
      In reality, parts simply wear out. I doubt a coolant type would make ALL coolant parts last a lifetime.

  • @maryrichmond2737
    @maryrichmond2737 Před 9 měsíci

    2004 convertible Volvo c70 needs help. Ca Usa

  • @prose1733
    @prose1733 Před 5 měsíci

    The procedure is wrong.
    The VVT hubs should be bottomed out clockwise direction. Continue rotating the hubs clockwise direction untill the marks align with the notches in the cover. Dont move them back and forth. Bring out the belt and retard both hubs just enough to align the teeth on the belt.