Quote from: larry104 on August 28, 2011, 05:54:04 amQuote from: jettabrendan on August 27, 2011, 09:33:50 pmto be honest you think the germans would have been smart enough to not use v belts and mechanical tensioners, they are the worst f**king thing to ever use in a vehicle. ive gone through 3 belts this month. the only true way to get rid of this problem would be to either swap to serp or drop in an aaz. it just happened to me again tonight coming home from the drive in, if i dont sit there for 5 min untill my tach starts working, the belt snaps, u can smell burning rubber. so amazingly aggravating that it makes me want to put a brick on the pedal and run it off a cliff. it helps if the pullies line up, usually have to find a old alternator to find shims because they stopped including them with new alts.Cold start of my Ecodiesel... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHVXbKD5IPk...No squeal.Nice! Is adding the roller tensioner the only change? Did you keep the stock tensioner?
Quote from: jettabrendan on August 27, 2011, 09:33:50 pmto be honest you think the germans would have been smart enough to not use v belts and mechanical tensioners, they are the worst f**king thing to ever use in a vehicle. ive gone through 3 belts this month. the only true way to get rid of this problem would be to either swap to serp or drop in an aaz. it just happened to me again tonight coming home from the drive in, if i dont sit there for 5 min untill my tach starts working, the belt snaps, u can smell burning rubber. so amazingly aggravating that it makes me want to put a brick on the pedal and run it off a cliff. it helps if the pullies line up, usually have to find a old alternator to find shims because they stopped including them with new alts.Cold start of my Ecodiesel... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHVXbKD5IPk...No squeal.
to be honest you think the germans would have been smart enough to not use v belts and mechanical tensioners, they are the worst f**king thing to ever use in a vehicle. ive gone through 3 belts this month. the only true way to get rid of this problem would be to either swap to serp or drop in an aaz. it just happened to me again tonight coming home from the drive in, if i dont sit there for 5 min untill my tach starts working, the belt snaps, u can smell burning rubber. so amazingly aggravating that it makes me want to put a brick on the pedal and run it off a cliff. it helps if the pullies line up, usually have to find a old alternator to find shims because they stopped including them with new alts.
Cold start of my Ecodiesel... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHVXbKD5IPk...No squeal.
Quote from: larry104 on August 28, 2011, 05:54:04 amCold start of my Ecodiesel... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHVXbKD5IPk...No squeal.Hey Larry, I noticed at the end of the video the chime sounding. My doesn't work. Where is the chime located? I want to use it as an alarm for warnings.
I was alerted to the fact that as the belt tension is adjusted more and more, the belt contact area to the alt pulley becomes less and less, making it more prone to squeal. With that in mind, I think the place to put the idler is where the OEM tensioner is located. Basically ditch the OEM tensioner and put an idler there to push the flat part of the belt inward (rather than outward), thus giving the belt more contact to the pulley as you tension it more.
How is your alternator spinnin with the glow plugs on at the same time? Or did I read that wrong?
The new Goodyear belt I put on lasted 3 weeks before it stretched to the point where there are no more adjustments with the tensioner. I put on a lawnmower belt, a Gates 6827 to be exact and so far so good, no squeal even with glow plugs, head lights, and blower on!. It remains to be seen how long it will last. This belt is wider (1/2" wide) and is meant to drive a higher HP load with a stronger grip. It has no teeth for cooling so may run hotter. We shall see how long it will last. If it works out well, I may change the rest of the belts to the 1/2" lawn mower belts..
Quote from: 92EcoDiesel Jetta on August 30, 2011, 11:59:43 amI was alerted to the fact that as the belt tension is adjusted more and more, the belt contact area to the alt pulley becomes less and less, making it more prone to squeal. With that in mind, I think the place to put the idler is where the OEM tensioner is located. Basically ditch the OEM tensioner and put an idler there to push the flat part of the belt inward (rather than outward), thus giving the belt more contact to the pulley as you tension it more. Tried that; It doesn't work. The arrangement significantly back bends the belt so it goes through a large stress reversal each rev, leading to early failure. In my setup, the extra idler maintains an adequate wrap angle without excessive back bending. In practice, I tighten the OEM tensioner to slightly less than than full tension. Then I bring in the extra idler to re-establish the wrap angle and properly tension the belt. It's important to mostly tension the belt with the OEM unit. This way, the extra idler barely back bends the belt.
Quote from: 92EcoDiesel Jetta on September 18, 2011, 07:27:25 amThe new Goodyear belt I put on lasted 3 weeks before it stretched to the point where there are no more adjustments with the tensioner. I put on a lawnmower belt, a Gates 6827 to be exact and so far so good, no squeal even with glow plugs, head lights, and blower on!. It remains to be seen how long it will last. This belt is wider (1/2" wide) and is meant to drive a higher HP load with a stronger grip. It has no teeth for cooling so may run hotter. We shall see how long it will last. If it works out well, I may change the rest of the belts to the 1/2" lawn mower belts..there is a difference in the angle of the V-groove on metric, and SAE pullies..using a SAE belt on Metric pulleys will not result in a long lasting belt.
You guys should try doing a voltage drop testhttp://www.vwdiesel.net/forum/index.php?topic=22321.0I don't ever recall having problems with my belts other than when I don't tighten them for months and then go through a deep puddle.