.but its not too often they do that,but not impossible either--a idler or tensioner pulley can have a bearing fail,and some are made of plastic..And if a serp belt fails or does jump off--you lose ALL your functions--no power steering,water pump,alternator,all at once !...but its not too often they do that,but not impossible either--a idler or tensioner pulley can have a bearing fail,and some are made of plastic..
V-belts can suck to change--especially the one behind all the other belts,you have to remove them all to replace that one..
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Is that anything like turpentine?What is the advantage of a surpintine belt versus a vbelt?
You have to remember to blame auto-correct . .....Yeah I spelled it wrong.
Serp belt failures are pretty easy to prevent if you do check it out during your regular maintenance. If you have more than 10 cracks per inch in the ribbed side of the belt it's time to chuck it. If you aren't looking at the belt during your maintenance then you deserve the belt to fail. As far as the tensioner or idler pulley failures, again if you hear squeeling you better check it out. You'll have advanced warning of a problem there for sure. My favorite is when a customer's vehicle gets towed in due to a belt failure and when asked I get told "oh it just started making noise today and then all of the sudden everything quit." We look it over and the plastic idler pulley is still smoking 30 minutes later. No flipping way that bearing had not been signing like mad for some time.
Even with the impending doom of loosing ALL accessories when a serp belt fails, carry a spare. They take 5 minutes to change out. Again, if you were paying attention you shouldn't have a major failure like a idler or tensioner quitting without warning.
V-belts, bring the suck. Belts stretch and require adjustment periodically. They are very prone to flipping or throwing with high rpm if that adjustment isn't just right. Collateral damage is always possible. Meaning if the belt that is the farthest back fails the broken/tossed belt can fall in the way of another belt and take it off track. Replacing them takes a lot of time if you have to go after any of the many that one might have. The other issue is V-belts are going the way of the dinosaurs. GM dumped them in the late 80's and most other OEMS did the same thing at the same time for the most part. You can still get them, but it's getting harder for the oddball stuff.
I've got a stock Serp setup on my 5.3 and it's stone simple and reliable. I kept the serp setup on my 350 I kept from my 75. It will go on my 69 Nova when I swap the Vortec heads on it. That's even with it having 2 belts on it, one for the alt and another for the p/s pump. I'm over the issues I've had with it in the past.
I agree with your points, and I'm also thoroughly done enjoying V-belts. But I once had a plastic idler pulley fail on me during a trip into the middle of nowhere (up North). I noticed that the belt was periodically squeaking (which serpentines shouldn't ever do), so I popped the hood and I could see the pulley wobbling around on its seized bearing. I tracked down a replacement before it had a time to completely fall off the bearing, but it was something that started suddenly. And someone who didn't actively listen for problematic noises probably wouldn't have noticed anything until the pulley was long gone. It wasn't something that provided advance warning like a typical wheel bearing failure.