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In reply to Post #16 I'm not surprised and I'm there at the mo with the uncertainty though not what your looking at.
I had my cam chain inspected by Peugeot who've re warranteed it, but I just don't trust them as the rectification work is 2k. When they tell you it's a 3 month back log and you think who's got 3 months loss of use on a vehicle.
When you look on Ebay and see sites selling recon engines because of the same fault, sub 3K£ fitted and you actually think that's not bad...WTH.
In Jan I'd made the decision to find a Merc or Renault because they don't use PSA or Ford engines but rather a R/M/Nissan unit. Buying a VW and paying extra because it's a VW...maybe in the past but not now, not for me anyway, each to their own though.
And as for letting any chain or belt run to manufacturers recs...is that a thing even. My old car said x years or 100k, standard in real world was 70k.....or run the risk!
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In reply to Post #14 It’s stories like that which are giving me sleepless nights!!
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In reply to Post #14 I guess my comment was about most Fords have wet belts is
Oh dear, must be well pissed. Based on the law of averages he sounds unlucky, hope he is covered by warranty, should be
I once bought a Ford escort 1.8 TD, still under warranty and the belt went,, ended up swapping it for a Mondeo, told them I didn’t want the escort back after they had repaired it
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In reply to Post #9 Not 100% relevant as it’s not the vehicles being discussed, but my boss has got a 2024 Ford Warrior truck with just over 20,000 on the clock, that snapped a wet belt last week. Still waiting to find out if it’s covered under warranty, needs a new engine, or is a total write off!
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In reply to Post #12 Totally agree on the service history BUT the worst cases of lieing, skimping or not doing paid for work have all been with main dealers. I now use a trusted back street garage for all my servicing and repairs.
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In reply to Post #11 Service records are everything, all online now, can see mine on the Ford app. If i was buying one, as mentioned below, i would want to see a dealer service history. To be fair, larger cooperates who operate a lot of vehicles usually have these so they may have high mileage but hey will have also been well maintained. I would check the previous owners and who has done the servicng
Flip side, trade vans are generally thrashed to death (multiple drivers) as opposed to one privately owned
Personally i certainly wouldn't buy an ex delivery van
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| | | Belch | | Posts: 4541 |  | | MODERATOR | |
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In reply to Post #10 All motors need looking after - are we saying most trade vans are / have been abused? Sure I read somewhere yrs ago that ex British Gas vans were worth a punt at high miles as they have complete service records . .
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In reply to Post #4 For me, lower mileage / newer vehicle with wet belt (with FSH) will always trump older higher mileage vehicles.
100% if i was buying older and didn't know the full service history i would just get the belt changed and try and negotiate that in the price
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In reply to Post #7 Good information
I have a 2023 transit custom. Most Ford engines have wet belts!
Ultimately it comes down to maintenance. You need to look after them and change the oil as recommended, do the belt at the recommended frequency and you should have no bother. From 2022 onwards they have upgraded the belt spec. Reading between the lines the problem is when diesel gets into the sump, this accelerates belt degradation. They check for this when they drop the oil
The new VW and Ford are on the same chassis too
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In reply to Post #1 what about a low mile t5.1 ?
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In reply to Post #6 The UK arm of VW stated for many years that the cam belt should be changed at 5 years or 60,000 miles (whatever sooner), and yet more recently VW UK has fallen inline with the rest of Europe/World and dropped the recommended 5 yearly change, and now recommend inspect at 100K miles.
Make you own mind up with that one.
Cost (including waterpump and tensioner) is anything from £600 to £1000+ (highly recommended to use genuine VAG parts for this job)
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In reply to Post #4 So the t6 needs a cambelt change every five’s years the same as a custom with a wet belt?
I’m guessing as it’s a dry belt it’s a much easier and cheaper job than on the custom?
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Doesn't the VW T6 have a wet belt for the oil pump though?
Ok, I get that's not as problematic as the ford offering.
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Its basically the wet belt on newer stuff vs cam belt on older stuff. Both have their problems if not maintained correctly, and thats without the lottery of the DPF/EGR/Adblue.
I have T6 Campervan and taken precautions to avoid DPF/EGR/Adblu problems and I just replace the cam belt every 5 years (not cheap).
However, personally I wouldnt avoid newer because of a wet belt .... If the vehicle is second hand, then ford main dealer service history is essential (or at least evidence of service history, including itemised paperwork confirming the correct oil has been used - the correct oil is very important!) and its likely to be as problem free as any alternative.
For me, lower mileage / newer vehicle with wet belt (with FSH) will always trump older higher mileage vehicles.
I cant wait to move away from diesel all together personally, just a shame it wont be for a whie yet.
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| | | Belch | | Posts: 4541 |  | | MODERATOR | |
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In reply to Post #1 Following - I want a 4Motion Caddy Max . . .or poss a 4Motion T6 SWB . . .I think?
All advice appreciated . . .
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