Hexus wrote:
It sounds just like the second one. It is difficult to start and when it does start it sounds a lot like the second video. Where is it pumping that air out from that is moving the glove?
That air is air being blown out the intake, seriously, it should be sucking air in constantly, but instead there is a noticeable "backfire" of air back out the intake, I think it is exhaust residual from the cylinders that are not venting correctly(normally this exhaust residual is what drives the turbo).
Those videos are actually both of the same Jeep, the second video is just what it sounds like with the boost hose off of the intake.
geordi wrote:
Wow - I wouldn't have thought that it could jump back INTO time after a belt event like that, and killing the rockers. Learn something new every day.
the nearest I can figure is that the stretch of the belt causes the jump to happen where the belt has the longest untensioned section, which means the crank. there are so few teeth and distance between the cam gears that it would be very hard for it to slip there, but at the crank, mush easier.
So now that the crank slips something has to hit, I've noticed that in these cases the exhaust rockers always seem a little worse than the intake rockers, now they are all bad mind you, but the exhaust is just a bit worse, so I think that what happens is the crank slips a tooth, or maybe more valves hit, the rockers fail like they are supposed to, and during the process the belt gets pushed back where it should be.
Its the only reason I can see that otherwise well maintained vehicles, 15-20k miles overdue for a belt change, can have mostly trashed rockers, suddenly, and still have the engine in time.
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