Snapped Aux Belt! :(

RUM4MO

Active Member
Jun 4, 2008
7,826
1,002
South Scotland
I'd reckon that if Halfords is easiest to get it from then you have no choice. Halfords would not be buying them in from just any old crap third world manufacturer, so I'd reckon that it would be good enough. If you are still worried, maybe get a VAG one as soon as you can, if I remember correctly, my wife's Polo did have a crappy French made one on it, but that lasted okay until I replaced it at 8 years old. Its smarter to get this belt replaced when the cam belt is getting replaced - that way this problem should never turn up. It has been known, on some makes of cars, that a failed auxiliary belt, can end up whipping the cam belt area cover off and stuffing it into the cam belt with disasterous results!
 

RUM4MO

Active Member
Jun 4, 2008
7,826
1,002
South Scotland
It was changed with the cambelt, approx 11k miles, but such is life!

Hum, so much for that theory then!! These belts are very durable, even the crappy French make that VAG tends to supply for that application - could have been a "bad" belt, though that is cold comfort to you!

I would have thought if that belt was up to the VAG standard, then something else might be causing a problem like pulley misalignment or the belt never been fitted correctly - as you can do I'd expect with a microgroove belt, that is unless all the outer and inner grooves are higher than the rest.
 
Feb 25, 2009
957
0
Rotherham/Leeds
Prior to it snapping it seemed to be aligned fine, I'd had a decent look it at it when I serviced the car.

Anyone know if these aux belts are stocked on the AA vans? I'll need a plan B in case I can't get one myself tomorrow.
 

Badger

Active Member
Dec 2, 2012
2,888
7
Newcastle, Staffs
Ouch, you could try the old fashioned Yellow Pages to find local motor factors then ring to check stock.

Or get down to a scrappy and get a used one if you were really desperate, but not recommended!
 

RUM4MO

Active Member
Jun 4, 2008
7,826
1,002
South Scotland
Ended up getting a ContiTech (Continental) belt, wasn't too expensive at all, but fiddly to fit but it's on and car is back running thankfully!

I'd reckon that a Conti belt will be higher quality that the possible Day*** that would have been fitted at factory and supplied by VAG.
 

RUM4MO

Active Member
Jun 4, 2008
7,826
1,002
South Scotland
That Halfrauds belt is too small, as I found out yesterday. Needs to be around 1180mm.

That seems to be the way life pans out - been there done that when replacing a belt on a Ford Zetec engine AND buying the belt from Ford.

Now I'm much older and maybe a wee bit wiser, so, when I buy a new car, I tend to make up a list of consumables for future use - you can normally read the numbers off the previous belt - that allows you to either select the correct one or reject the one the VAG parts place offers you BEFORE you get to trying to do the job. Ther will be two sets of number on a VAG supplied belt, the VAG P/N and the belt manufacturer's P/N - this second number will tend to include its width and length.

I'm just writting this down to save someone else wasting their time, or if buying a new belt and keeping it as a spare - bad idea, change the belt after maybe 6 years and keep the old one as an emergancy get you home belt.
 
Nimbus hosting - Based solely in the UK.