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For those interested in "Modern Classic" Cars


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5 hours ago, Quarryscapes said:

Lots of engines have chains, lots have belts. It's not manufacturer, fuel or age specific. 

 

It sort of is. I'm fairly certain engines manufactured by BMW, Mercedes & Porsche have always used timing chains no matter the fuel type.

 

That being said, no guarantee they use their own engines in their own cars. With Mercedes, the A/B/CLA/Citan vehicles from about 2015 onwards have used Renault engines.

 

Andy.

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Chains are not neccessary better, some of the BMW V8s have huge long tensioner strips between the banks and tend to stretch.

 

My previous car had a cam belt equipped V6 and that was quite easy to change. Looped around 2 cams, an adjustable idler, another pair of cams, a tensioner.

 

So inline chain is proabbly better, V belts probably better

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I have no objection to belts, if they are reasonable to change. The twin turbo  Maserati V6 has the silly idea if the cam belt driving the water pump, hence if the pump seizes it will wreck the belt to maximise damage.

 

Belts have the advantage that they don’t stretch, hence the cam timing stays consistent over the life of the belt. Chains wear at the pins, get longer and throw out the cam timing. But a well specced chain should last.

 

My MX5 has a cam chain (Ford based engine), which is convenient 

 

All the best

 

Katy

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The cambelt/water pump relationship is pretty widespread. Where applicable there's a new pump included in the kit.

 

Even where one isn't, water pumps only cost about thirty quid but nowadays often take the same amount of dismantling to fit as the cambelt itself.

 

Common sense to replace it while its get-at-able.

 

John

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I wish they were that cheap (the Maserati one used to be a reasonable price, although not cheap, they are now £300 for a pattern one and £1200 for an oe one - a lot of money every 2 years) and it renders a readily available generic service part to now need a vehicle specific part. All this while making a failed water pump result in almost instantaneous engine failure.

 

The only reason for this seems to be packaging on modern cars, and it would be even easier to package an electric water pump (which also saves pumping coolant around when not required)

 

All the best

 

Katy

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55 minutes ago, Kickstart said:

 

 

My MX5 has a cam chain (Ford based engine), which is convenient 

 

 

Actually no, it's a Mazda engine. Ford also use it and call it a Duratec. (Assuming an MX5 NC). The 2.5 variants are fitted new in the Revived Escort Mk1 and Mk2s  from MST. https://mst-cars.com/ along with MX5 gearbox using a bellhousing adapter to mount it at a different angle. 

 

Oh... here's my old MX5 having it's timing belt replaced because the water pump was squealing! 

P1010629.JPG

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Which can be done by varying the speed of an electric pump. Could even initially reverse the direction of flow to warm the block more quickly from the excess heat from the head.

 

Even with a mechanical pump, they can easily be driven by the accessory belt without risking instant catastrophic engine damage when the pump fails, even if the pump is behind the cam belt.

 

All the best

 

Katy

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4 minutes ago, Quarryscapes said:

 

Actually no, it's a Mazda engine. Ford also use it and call it a Duratec. (Assuming an MX5 NC). The 2.5 variants are fitted new in the Revived Escort Mk1 and Mk2s  from MST. https://mst-cars.com/ along with MX5 gearbox using a bellhousing adapter to mount it at a different angle. 

 


Interesting. Various parts are marked FoMoCo!

 

All the best

 

Katy

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8 minutes ago, Quarryscapes said:

 

Actually no, it's a Mazda engine. Ford also use it and call it a Duratec. (Assuming an MX5 NC). The 2.5 variants are fitted new in the Revived Escort Mk1 and Mk2s  from MST. https://mst-cars.com/ along with MX5 gearbox using a bellhousing adapter to mount it at a different angle. 

 

Oh... here's my old MX5 having it's timing belt replaced because the water pump was squealing! 

P1010629.JPG

Just viewed the MST website. Ooh err Matron....

 

John

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7 hours ago, Quarryscapes said:

 

Yes, You'll probably find a lot of your MX5 is so marked if you go hunting. My Mazda 3 certainly was, as is my current Volvo C30. 

Ironically my Ford Mondeo has a Peugeot and Citroen badge on a number of  black boxes in the engine bay.. 

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10 hours ago, 37114 said:

Ironically my Ford Mondeo has a Peugeot and Citroen badge on a number of  black boxes in the engine bay.. 

Diesel-engined Fords used Peugeot engines for many years, and may still for all I know, though possibly made under licence rather than bought-in.

 

A friend has a Focus on a 65 plate that has basically the same 1560cc Hdi motor my 2010 Pug 207 had, albeit in a much beefier state of tune (130 bhp against 92, I think).

 

AIUI Peugeot developed that engine jointly with BMW so it probably cropped up elsewhere too. Mini? 1-Series?

 

All very incestuous.....

 

John

Edited by Dunsignalling
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18 hours ago, Quarryscapes said:

 My Mazda 3 certainly was, as is my current Volvo C30. 

 

The Mazda 3 in it's first two incarnations shared the same floorplan as the Focus and Volvo S40, the latest one doesn't.

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53 minutes ago, Hobby said:

 

The Mazda 3 in it's first two incarnations shared the same floorplan as the Focus and Volvo S40, the latest one doesn't.

Which was when Ford had the Premier Automotive Group, why design three different floorpans/engines/gearboxes etc etc when one will do?

 

I had a good job a few times when I had to go to Hiroshima and photograph the production line and factory areas for records, I took three massive cases only one had clothes in, I came back with two of them packed solid with Kato N gauge models/track.....the exchange rate was excellent back then, the models costing about a quarter of what they did in England at the time :senile:

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On 15/12/2020 at 14:28, Kickstart said:


Interesting. Various parts are marked FoMoCo!

 

All the best

 

Katy

Designed by Mazda adopted by Ford. Not sure who actually makes them. One less servicei item for my NC.

Edited by doilum
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On 15/12/2020 at 23:11, big jim said:

My jag s type was marked up Ford all over the place

 

The mini is obviously marked up BMW on all the parts 


Quite a bit of our X Type was labelled Ford (even if something like 80% of the car was claimed to be Jaguar specific).

 

4 hours ago, doilum said:

Designed by Mazda adopted by Ford. Not sure who actually makes them. One less servicei item for my NC.


Major advantage if the NC us no cam belt (and the chain is long lived). Strange bit is that there is no consumable fuel filter.

 

All the best

 

Katy

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Had to laugh yesterday, I was on the M6 toll road in the mini and a Lamborghini aventador passed me near the toll booths, we ended up alongside each other and when my barrier went up I left the lambo standing and it took him nearly 2 miles to finally get past...........

 

 

 

 

 

the reason?

 

 

 

 

 

when he got to the toll booth the driver couldn’t reach the card slot from the drivers seat so had to open the gull wing door and get out to put his card in

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