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Old 04 Jul 2004, 02:39 pm
Caroline
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Default Re: 83 Civic Timing Belt Replacement

Best solutions, in order of quickest:

1.
Stop by any independent shop and offer $10 to break the pulley bolt free with an
air wrench. I know of at least two posters for whom this worked fine. (Not sure
how they got home. Just snugged the bolt up and drove a couple of miles, and
then at home it came free easily?)

2.
Rent an air wrench and air compressor and do it yourself.

3.
Use the hints at

http://www.crxsi.com/resources/repai...belt/index.htm

http://timingbelt.soben.com/

http://www.cadvision.com/blanchas/54pontiac/honda.html

4.
group.google for "pulley bolt" AND "timing belt" at the alt.autos.honda and
rec.autos.makers.honda newsgroups and you'll see discussion of the method your
father described. I'm not terribly experienced, but geez this method gives me
the willies. I wouldn't do it unless I heard from more people here about doing
it with your 1983 Civic.

5.
Which 83 Civic 1500 do you have? 3-Door DX, 3-Door S, 4-Door? Alternatively,
have you looked at the crankshaft pulley and seen holes in it like item 7 at
Majestic site http://tinyurl.com/2bg99 ? Or does it look more like item 8 at
this same site? If it has holes in it like item 7, you might be able to make a
"pulley holder tool" that does the job fine. Steps:

(1) Measure the diameter of the holes in the pulley = D below. Measure the
thickness of the pulley = Th below.
(2) Buy one 3/8" thick, 1 3/8 " wide, 2' flat steel bar (a surveying stake,
technically), Lowe's has them for under $4 where I live. Alternatively use a
piece of scrap iron/steel of similar dimensions.
(3) Buy one Grade 8 bolt whose diameter is D or a little less and whose length
is an inch or so longer than Th(?) Fine thread is preferred. Buy one or two nuts
to match.
(4) Buy maybe four washers and six inches of rubber hose that will fit over the
bolt.
(5) Maybe an inch from the end of the bar you bought at Lowe's, drill a hole of
diameter approx. D.
(6) Attach the bar to a lower pulley bolt hold using the bolt. Use the washers
and hose as a spacer to protect any lips on the crankshaft pulley. Make sure the
bolt presses only against the bolt hole and not any lip. Orient the bar so that
turning the crankshaft pulley counterclockwise (looking from the driver's side
front wheel well) will cause the bar to resist the CCW motion. The end of the
bar opposite the bolt hole will rest against the ground, preferably on a stack
of a couple of scrap 1/2-inch thick plywood boards. The ground resists you
applying torque to the pulley.

(7) If this configuration does not look good or doesn't work, consider drilling
a second hole in the bar and attach the bar with two Grade 8 bolts.

(8) I have read that this can be done with one bolt attaching the bar to the
pulley. The guy actually used a steel pipe rather than a bar, but it must be a
high thickness, strong pipe.

My own 1991 Civic's pulley has 8 bolt holes (IIRC). I used this tool design but
with two bolts. It is a modified version of a design another poster (Eric) has
used. Worked great, though I caution you, not all crankshaft pulleys are shaped
the same. Before my modification (which was adding the washers and hose spacer),
I chipped off a sizable chunk of my car's pulley. I am installing a new pulley
this week.

I used the two, high quality 10-inch long, 1/2 inch diameter extensions and jack
for support of the breaker bar, as pictured nicely at
http://www.cadvision.com/blanchas/54pontiac/honda.html . This means you need a
1/2 inch socket that fits the pulley bolt.

Do not try this with a 3/8-inch drive. Chances are good that you'll shear (=
break) the drive.

I used a five-foot pipe over the breaker bar and had little difficulty breaking
the bolt free. When it breaks free it is usually "dramatic," so you must brace
yourself when it does break free. Maybe have an old sofa cushion underneath your
hands as you push at a distance of five feet. (I rapped my knuckles very
slightly when the bolt break free.) It makes a cracking sound that will make you
think you broke something. You probably did not, as long as you go slow and
check that your tool is holding fine. Dust rose when my car's pulley bolt broke
free, too.

I think your car's pulley bolt needs to be tightened to only 83-ft-lbs, but you
should confirm this with a 1983 Civic manual or maybe someone here at the group.
Note that breakaway torque is almost always a lot higher on these bolts. I
figure yours will require around 200 ft-lbs, based on a lot of reading here. It
could be more.

http://www.honda.co.uk/owner/Worksho...sb200/6-20.pdf has the
steps for a t-belt change on a 1984 Civic, but the 1983 is a little different,
and torque specs. may not be the same.

You should change the water pump and maybe the timing belt tensioner and spring,
too. Also, many people change the crank and cam seals as part of this job.

Also, I'd double check that your pulley bolt is right-hand threaded. I know the
ones from the late 1980s and on are, but one never knows with older cars.
Someone here may confirm.

Updates welcome. This is the oldest Honda I've seen reported on for a T-belt
change. Should be interesting.

Good luck.

"Andrew Taki Browne-Kondo" <andrew_taki@sbcglobal.net> wrote
> The timing belt on my '83 Civic 1500 just broke. I've never replaced a
> timing belt and am looking for some advice. Any answers to the following
> questions will be very appreciated.
>
> * What's the best way to remove the crankshaft pulley bolt? My father
> mentioned a way to wedge a braker bar against the frame or ground and then
> use the power of the starter to get the bolt loose. Because the pulley and
> bolt move counter-clockwise, I can't figure it out. If I simply stick the
> braker bar on the bolt head and turn the key, the bolt will be tightened.
> Anybody know the trick?
>
> * I hear the crankshaft pulley is really hard to pull even when the bolt is
> removed. What's the best way to remove the crankshaft pulley?
>
> * What other parts should I replace when doing this job?



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