Option A: No tools. I have done this twice. It's kind of a pain but it works. The cam and crank will stay at TDC pretty well but the IP likes to move either direction. Install the new belt on the crank sprocket and intermediate shaft pulley, then just put the belt on the edge of the cam and IP sprockets, ensuring the mark on the IP sprocket stays lined up with the mark you made on the IP bracket before you took the old belt off. It helps if you are a patient man and have three hands, but like I said, I have done it. Once everything is lined up and everything is still at TDC work the belt fully onto the sprockets.Option B: Improvised tools. I haven't tried this but I'm sure it helps. Find a deep socket the right size and use it to lock the IP through one of the small sprocket holes and the hole in the bracket. Then use a piece of flatstock or other material to lock the cam in place via the slot in the end of the cam on the drivers side. Shim with feeler gauges if necessary. To tension the belt, I use two allen keys stuck in the holes in the tensioner. If you rotate the top one so that it hits the lower one, you can then use them to tighten up the tensioner. A tiny cheater pipe is useful to get leverage. Expect to bend the crap out of your allen keys, though.NOW, before starting the engine, turn the crank over by hand 4 complete revolutions (remove the glow plugs to make this easy) and check that everything is still at TDC and that your pistons are not hitting your valves. You should be able to twist your belt between IP and cam not quite 45 degrees if the tension is correct.It's recommended that you re-time the IP after a timing belt change (that's the part that requires the $100 dial gauge and adapters), but it is not strictly necessary. The new belt is a little tighter (hasn't stretched yet) but the timing should not be off by much.Also, many here recommend removing the cam sprocket and resetting it, and with good reason, but I have never done this and I have been lucky so far after 3 belts on 2 different cars.
Has anyone uesed the timing belt Parts#CD-43 form AutoZone is it the right belt for my 1.6N/A?
the old one's center protruded about equal to the inside, and featured a hex body. You simply put a crescent wrench on the hex, rotated it until correct tension was achieved, and then tightened the nut.
Harbor Freight sells a digital one that looks to be much easier to use than the traditional dial gauge for $14.