hello,
I've recently acquired an old 110 200TDi defender which I'm slowly bringin up to MOT standard (I hope).
As I couldn't verify the last timing belt replacment I decided to put a new one in. In the process of removing the water pump, I managed to snap one of the short bolts, and it became apparent that two of the three long bolts that go through to the engine block (where the water pumps in to the block) have been broken previously and were just 'stuck' in with silicone rubber. The only long bolt intact is the 'far right'/lower one. I can probably extract the short bolt stub with mole grips.
question is: would you try and remove the old bolt stubs so new ones can be used (which involves removing the timing gears, back plate, etc, then trying to extract/drill out the stubs, without losing the injection timing), or just hope it'll do without them?
To make matters worse I suspect the antifreeze in it (orange) is the new OAT type and not the normal e'glycol type, and there is slight evidence of it weeping out from the joint between the block/ timing backplate.
I'm tempted to do the timing belt and put it back together with the right antifreeze and see how it gets on but am uncertain as to the likelyhood of trouble...
Any advice welcome
Thx
I've recently acquired an old 110 200TDi defender which I'm slowly bringin up to MOT standard (I hope).
As I couldn't verify the last timing belt replacment I decided to put a new one in. In the process of removing the water pump, I managed to snap one of the short bolts, and it became apparent that two of the three long bolts that go through to the engine block (where the water pumps in to the block) have been broken previously and were just 'stuck' in with silicone rubber. The only long bolt intact is the 'far right'/lower one. I can probably extract the short bolt stub with mole grips.
question is: would you try and remove the old bolt stubs so new ones can be used (which involves removing the timing gears, back plate, etc, then trying to extract/drill out the stubs, without losing the injection timing), or just hope it'll do without them?
To make matters worse I suspect the antifreeze in it (orange) is the new OAT type and not the normal e'glycol type, and there is slight evidence of it weeping out from the joint between the block/ timing backplate.
I'm tempted to do the timing belt and put it back together with the right antifreeze and see how it gets on but am uncertain as to the likelyhood of trouble...
Any advice welcome
Thx