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Serpentine Belt Life

Discussion in '5th Gen 4Runners (2010-2024)' started by Turd Ferguson, Nov 26, 2024 at 3:18 PM.

  1. Nov 26, 2024 at 3:18 PM
    #1
    Turd Ferguson

    Turd Ferguson [OP] New Member

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    How long did you run your stock serpentine belt? I’m at 115K miles and was thinking of changing it soon but it looks fine, no cracks. It’s very wide compared to any other vehicles I’ve owned.
     
    Thatbassguy likes this.
  2. Nov 26, 2024 at 3:28 PM
    #2
    Thatbassguy

    Thatbassguy New member? Really??

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    This is funny. I was thinking the same thing recently. I'm at 126K. I bought a new one a few months ago and it's been in the back seat waiting for me to get motivated. Or, until it breaks and I have to fix it road-side.
     
  3. Nov 26, 2024 at 3:32 PM
    #3
    Borracho Loco

    Borracho Loco My 4Runner identifies as a Prius!

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    Oooh look, another mod.....

    The rule of thumb is to change them every 100k miles. So you don't see any cracks, but do you hear any squealing when you start the engine?

    I'd air on the side of caution and replace it before it pops off and leaves you stranded somewhere.
     
    Superdave1.0 and Thatbassguy like this.
  4. Nov 26, 2024 at 3:34 PM
    #4
    3JOH22A

    3JOH22A Toyota Gigolo

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    Modern belts supposedly erode, so you'd need a comb-shaped profile gauge:
    https://dayco.com.au/databank/documents/How-To-Identify.pdf

    10 years / 100k is a good round number with safety margin. A failed belt whipping around can cause significant collateral damage. This is for on-pavement use. Frequent mudding will kill the idler pulleys quicker, at which point you should probably replace the belt too.

    The factory belt on mine was on the verge of failure when I bought it at 138k: https://www.4runners.com/posts/438971
     
    Last edited: Nov 26, 2024 at 3:44 PM
    whippersnapper02 likes this.
  5. Nov 26, 2024 at 4:08 PM
    #5
    icebear

    icebear Recovered Kia Owner

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    My Sorento’s was fine at the time of it’s sale at something like 7 yr/130k miles, my friend’s Civic was, to reference a certain rusty old boat hitch, “barely hanging on” at around 9 yr/120k so YMMV.
     
  6. Nov 26, 2024 at 4:31 PM
    #6
    Turd Ferguson

    Turd Ferguson [OP] New Member

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    Mine doesn’t have any little cracks like that yet… At this point I’ll probably wait until spring since unless we get some decent weather in the next couple weeks.
     
  7. Nov 26, 2024 at 4:32 PM
    #7
    Turd Ferguson

    Turd Ferguson [OP] New Member

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    Pretty amazing compared to the old v belts that would be worn and squealing at 60K.
     
  8. Nov 26, 2024 at 4:46 PM
    #8
    Lc200

    Lc200 New Member

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    I changed mine at 160,000.
    However, at 200k which I should reach soon, I will change all the original pulleys and the tensioner and change the belt again simply because I am there.
    But 100k is a good interval to do it.
     
    Turd Ferguson[OP] likes this.
  9. Nov 26, 2024 at 5:48 PM
    #9
    Trail Runnah

    Trail Runnah New Member

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    LMAO, I did the exact same thing.

    It's at 184k, I've owned it since 79k and don't know if it's ever been changed. I took a look at it a few weeks ago and it looks fine.
     
  10. Nov 26, 2024 at 5:49 PM
    #10
    Trail Runnah

    Trail Runnah New Member

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    That's a good point, actually. My brother had a Mazda 6 about 10 years ago and the belt failed, causing all kind of other damage. I don't remember the exact details, but I think it damaged the harness. The car was never right after that, all kind of weird electrical problems here and there.
     
    Thatbassguy likes this.
  11. Nov 26, 2024 at 6:11 PM
    #11
    Thatbassguy

    Thatbassguy New member? Really??

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    The timing belt on my '03 was still hanging on at 230+K miles. It was in bad shape, but didn't break.... thank God!

    IMG_20150501_234401705.jpg
     
  12. Nov 26, 2024 at 9:49 PM
    #12
    TRoosevelt

    TRoosevelt New Member

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    I only got to 73,000 on mine which was quite surprising They are easy to change though.
     
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  13. Nov 26, 2024 at 9:57 PM
    #13
    Superdave1.0

    Superdave1.0 New Member

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    Serpentine belt is very cheap insurance. Shoot, at 60k I would recommend replacement depending how it looks. Why gamble on a $30-$50 part?

    It's too critical, will leave you stranded if it fails.
     
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  14. Nov 27, 2024 at 5:43 AM
    #14
    Turd Ferguson

    Turd Ferguson [OP] New Member

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    I like to go with the if it isn’t broke don’t fix it mentality. Plus I have too many other projects and hobbies going on to waste time unnecessarily.
     
  15. Nov 27, 2024 at 6:19 AM
    #15
    3JOH22A

    3JOH22A Toyota Gigolo

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    There's the guy with the salvage TRD Pro who kept driving after the engine overheated, to the point of melting the oil pickup inlet...
     

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