5530 messages,
Last post on Mar 31, 2011 at 10:21 AM
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Honda Accord Coupe Forum.
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Honda Accord, Sedan
#5500 of 5530 Re: 2008 Honda accord exl v6 sedan [ginskee]
by jonsecada
Aug 12, 2009 (3:56 pm)
What dealer in Phoenix did not charge you for replacing your rear brakes? I had to dish out almost $400 for my 15,000 mile maintenance at Right Honda...
#5501 of 5530 Re: 2008 Honda accord exl v6 sedan [jonsecada]
by ginskee
Aug 12, 2009 (4:10 pm)
I went to the same place you went.
Aug 19, 2009 (7:38 am)
My 16 month old 2008 Accord Sedan EXL V6 simply turned off while going 35 mph.
Would crank but not start. Towed to dealership and checked out. Timing belt "shredded". The cause was not exactly determined, but a series of failures led to the timing belt and, of course, to the valves being destroyed. A repair is underway.
Anyone hear of such a potentially dangerous (good thing we had pulled off of I-95) mechanical failure on a car with less than 34,000 miles?
By the way -- no warning lights, no sounds out of the ordinary. In fact, it was running like a top, as usual, until it stopped.
#5503 of 5530 Re: timing belt [danny08]
by stephen987
Aug 19, 2009 (7:49 am)
I will be very interested to hear their diagnosis of why this happened--the belt on the Accord is supposed to be good for 100k miles before replacement, isn't it?
Is the tension on the belt maintained by oil pressure? If so, and if you haven't kept records of oil changes, then the dealership and/or the manufacturer may claim neglect, and decline to cover the cost of your repairs.
One more thought--could malfunctioning VCM have triggered this failure?
#5504 of 5530 Re: timing belt [danny08]
by jodar96
Aug 19, 2009 (8:54 am)
This is a serious flaw....... A slight misalignment of all pullies/sprockets that the timing belt goes around ( just like A/C, Alt., P/S belts) could cause fast wear of timing belt. A frozen timing belt tensioner (just like frozen outer belt tensioner) could cause destruction of timing belt.
A timing belt made out of some flawed process/material could also fall apart on its own under normal use.
Oil pressure, driving fast/slow has no effect on timing belt. Too hot or too cold climate could make the belt go sooner than its 105K mile service interval but not at 34K miles.
Just make sure this repair is well documented. If it happens again, it is clearly a case of an engine put together not quite right. Make sure service manager puts down on your service order as when the next timin belt change is due and stick to it.
Joe
Aug 19, 2009 (10:01 am)
Could you enlighten me on timing belts/chains? Does the I4 have one? If so, does it also have to be replaced at 105K?
Thanks.