naturist wrote:
Oh, man, I didn't catch the part about 123,000 miles, so I'd have to add, in caps, and red letters about 3 inches high: you have been living on borrowed time for that timing belt. There is no way I'd even continue driving it around town, let alone make a 2,000 mile move with it that way. Chrysler/Jeep was not kidding when they said (it's in your owners' manual) to replace that belt at 100,000 miles. It is not possible to make a diesel engine that is not an interference engine, and if that belt breaks, whether you are idling at a light or steaming down the interstate, it is going to be both expensive and time consuming to get 'er back on the road. Valves will smack pistons, rocker arms break and stuff, you won't like it at all.
You want that Hayden fan clutch. Just plan on doing fan clutch, timing belt, tensioners and idlers, and water pump all at once. The Jeep will be down for a whole day, and you will have peace of mind driving out there. That beats hell out of getting half-way there, say, somewhere in the middle of western Mizzou or Eastern Dorothy-land, where you can't see a single dwelling in any direction clear to the horizon, and having the engine quit amongst horrible clanks and rattles. And who you gonna get to fix it after summoning a tow from over the horizon somewhere?
Exactly my points.
As for how long you would be down, if you have it done NOW and before you leave? As I stated before, I have the timing belt job down to about 3 hours flat. I did the last job in 4 hours, including the water pump and as it was getting VERY dark (dang traffic delays) and doing the fan clutch does not add more than another 10 minutes to the job. 4 hours. OR you can take that insane gamble and risk being down for a MINIMUM of 5 days.
Some back-of-a-napkin estimates for everyone to ponder. Please tell me if I am wrong on any of this, I didn't know that AAA wouldn't tow trailers - that is good to know.
Breakdown (in the middle of Nowhere, because Murphy is a nasty bastage): 3 hours minimum delay
Hotel for night #1: $100+
Towing (assume no AAA or roadside insurance): $60 hookup, $1 per mile to dealership: $120+
Rental car (no towing): $75/day OR
Uhaul one-way rental (only allowed to tow their equipment... Lets say you ignore that and do it anyway): $400 minimum
Dealership inspection of CRD: $120
Hotel for night #2: $100+
Dealership estimate for timing repair / water pump / rockers / valve cover / injectors (why not, its only money)/ cylinder head/ glow plugs/ 12 hours labor: $1500 labor, $3500+ in parts plus shipping.
Hotel for nights 3-7 while awaiting shipping of parts: $400 (being generous here - could be WEEKS lead time)
Hotel for nights 10-15 while you hope the dealer actually knows what they are doing: $500
Oh right... FOOD for all this time waiting: $375 per person @ 25 per day (very modest number)
Total then...
Repairs and rentals: $5640
Hotels and food: $1875 for just one person, add ~$375 per extra person @ estimated 15 days delayed.
$7515 being gambled here, and from experience, I can tell you that the odds are better in Vegas.
Seriously, this is what I guesstimate, anyone have anything I missed or think I'm too high / too low? We ALL know that the dealers will want to replace (or in their words, 'inspect for safety') just about everything, which means disassembling the entire engine, whether it needs it or not. Thoughts everyone?
Cards-on-the-table time:
Idparts shows the timing belt kit as IN-STOCK. $429 has everything you will need replaced.
Your local auto parts shack can get the Hayden heavy-duty clutch for about $60, and probably overnight. It is VERY common fitting part, fits just about every Jeep that I am aware of. I put mine in my 97 Grand Cherokee, fit perfect. The coolant is also readily available.
If you ordered the parts TOMORROW (monday) and wanted me to, I could be there on WEDNESDAY installing it. Yeah, that fast. You would be mobile again Wednesday evening. Can you really say that this is a bad deal? I'm not doing these jobs for the money. Yes, I do ask a reasonable amount for the job, but FAR LESS than a failure would cost you, and the cash does help me feed my other businesses (I work in film and television). My concern is about members helping members, and nobody should have to endure a timing belt failure EVER. Unplanned breakdowns SUCK.