Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Engine type matters.
I believe the Odyssey has an interference engine.
That means if the timing belt goes, the engine damage will be catastrophic and expense of the repairs will total the car.
At 115k miles, you are at the upper end of any reasonable expectation of life-span for a timing belt. If you expect to keep driving it, you should get it replaced; otherwise, sell/trade-in now or soon. Rough guess is $1500 to get it done.
Good luck.
Perfectly said.
OP, get it done asap.
Why 115k is the upper end of “reasonable expectation”? Based on what? If you search the web you won’t find reports of odyssey original timing belts breaking but you would find plenty about replacement belts breaking due to incorrect installation or inferior aftermarket parts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Engine type matters.
I believe the Odyssey has an interference engine.
That means if the timing belt goes, the engine damage will be catastrophic and expense of the repairs will total the car.
At 115k miles, you are at the upper end of any reasonable expectation of life-span for a timing belt. If you expect to keep driving it, you should get it replaced; otherwise, sell/trade-in now or soon. Rough guess is $1500 to get it done.
Good luck.
Perfectly said.
OP, get it done asap.
Anonymous wrote:
Engine type matters.
I believe the Odyssey has an interference engine.
That means if the timing belt goes, the engine damage will be catastrophic and expense of the repairs will total the car.
At 115k miles, you are at the upper end of any reasonable expectation of life-span for a timing belt. If you expect to keep driving it, you should get it replaced; otherwise, sell/trade-in now or soon. Rough guess is $1500 to get it done.
Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you sure your previous car had a timing belt and not a timing chain? I would do this maintenance if you want to keep it but next time get a Sienna.I just posted in another thread that our Odyssey got 207k total before we got rid of it--that was with one new timing chain but we weren't going to do a second, plus it had other issues by then.
Does it include changing the water pump?
I meant one new timing belt, not chain. The Sienna has a timing chain.
Anonymous wrote:Are you sure your previous car had a timing belt and not a timing chain? I would do this maintenance if you want to keep it but next time get a Sienna.I just posted in another thread that our Odyssey got 207k total before we got rid of it--that was with one new timing chain but we weren't going to do a second, plus it had other issues by then.
Does it include changing the water pump?
I just posted in another thread that our Odyssey got 207k total before we got rid of it--that was with one new timing chain but we weren't going to do a second, plus it had other issues by then.
Anonymous wrote:When it goes, as they all do eventually, the engine stops. Dead. Everything. Ours died in the middle of an intersection on the way home from Balducci's. I took taxi home with groceries. Thankfully not alone so DH waited for AAA tow to dealer service lot and walked home 3 miles. No warning.
Since then we have always replaced timing belts when recommended. In my experience all the rubber stuff gets replaced every 7 years regardless of low miles