To each there own I suppose, i'll actually be doing this to my mk3 tommorow night AGAIN ! when I built the engine the brakes wherent fitted up, so my only option was to tighten the bolt to 90NM using 2 tools I CNC milled that bolted to the g'box flanges, marked the 90 degree rotation on the bolt head and went at it with an air gun. I needed to go from 12 o'clock to 15 mins past, well I only made it round to about 10 past. It pissed me off big time because I'd used a new bolt, wheel and Loctite 275. I just said enough is enough, built the engine further and got it running, but its been on my mind ever since and I know its simply not good enough, so I ordered all the new parts again today and called Loctites HQ to ask about there strongest threadlocker. They said if you use 2701 and give it a full 8 hours to go off, it really shouldnt move unless you heat it to 200 degrees C, thats its break away temperature.
I've got 288mm VR6 brakes now so with the help of a buddy, hopefully they should hold when I'm swinging a pull bar on it.
Another thing I noticed. I measured this a while ago, the last time I fitted one. The cranks notch will take an 8.02mm slip gauge, an 8.01mm has play and an 8.03mm will not go. The pully's key measures 7.98mm. There is noticable movement in the pully wheel, so naturally, when your applying the turning force, the wheel will want to go clockwise with the bolt, that gives it that 0.04mm gap. If your turning clockwise and the pully wheel hits its limit on the > face and leaves the gap to the <, the pull of the cam, inj. pump, alt and PAS pump will obviously make the wheel want to turn anti-clockwise and because its a RH thread, once it moves that 0.04 back, it WILL wind itself out in a short space of time.
So, i've decided i'm going to get 2 people, one to step on the brakes, and the other to hold the pully wheel to the < using an oil filter wrench on the OD. Once its tightened to full spec with 2701 threadlocker on there and with the wheel tightened in that posistion i've mentioned... HOW could it come off. That bolt is not having a lot asked of it. Its a very strong bolt and fine thread too.
The updated harmonic damper is £260 + VAT. I'm not paying that, i'll go so far but that is just a bit too much.
Mine still has its original alternator. I'm not up to date on the TDi alternator i've heard mentioned. Not convinced either, theres so little resistance there.
I think had it been LH thread, there would have been practically zero failures in this area. At least it has a key, renault actually have a current DCi with a floating crank wheel. All pully's are floating on that engine..... So its more accurate, but I can help feel like its unsafe, not even taper locked like the VW camshaft. I hate to even think about it ! yet, never heard of a failure !
I've never heard of a 1.6 Diesel throwing the bolt and wheel. Has anyone else ?
DM