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1987 S4, 100,000 miles, MOT July 2011, taxed til January 2011. Owned for four and a half years Any questions 07826 811303 or jakeyboy928@hotmail.co.uk Going on holiday Friday 20th and back 29th so won't be able to answer enquiries until I return - Price is £5500
Stuff I use
| Porsche 928 Cam Belt and Water Pump warning |
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Cam Belt{mosgoogle} This is a very important issue that 928 owners ignore at their peril. If a cam belt fails (on all but the early 4.5 litre models) a 928 will suffer catastrophic engine damage and leave its owner with a bill in the £5000 region! The good news is that with regular servicing (for checks), and cam belt replacement, the chances of cam belt failure can be reduced to almost nil.What Is A Cam Belt?A cam belt is a long belt that drives the cam shafts with power from the crankshaft. The cam shafts in turn open and shut the valves (which allow air and fuel in, and exhaust gases out of; each cylinder). The valves must also be driven in sequence with the pistons in the cylinders so that air anf fuel is injection in at the correct moment and exhaust gases expelled at the correct time.On a 928 there are 8 cylinders, and either 2 camshafts with 16 valves or 4 camshafts with 32 valves, depending on the model. The DangerThe danger arises because most 928 engines (except the early 4.5litre - but especially all 32v variants) are designed so that when the engine is running the pistons and valves move in and out of the same space at the top of the cylinder. Therefore if the valves do not move in sequence with the crankshaft (bacause of cam belt failure) the pistons and valves will hit each other. With the huge forces involved (especially at high rpms) this can lead to severe damage of pistons, rods, valves, cam shafts, cylinder heads and maybe even the engine block and crankshaft themselves.Porsche recommendationPorsche recommend the following:
928.org.uk recommendationExperience from 928 owners and 928 mechanics suggests that the Porsche recommendation is not conservative enough - especially if you drive your car hard (where the abrupt changes in engine speed put extra stresses on the belt). Experts like David Roberts of 928 Specialists in the USA recommend the following:
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