hey lads and ladys. what are the differences are there in the twin V belt conversion and the toothed? do u get much slip with twin V? what are the problems u get with each etc. cheer for any help you give
Twin V's are the standard setup. Conversion include toothied belts and micro V belts
ahhh i assumed they were standard but mine just looks like its been rubbing the cam cover and as a result sumone cut the bottom of it off. what are the micro V conversions? tell me what you know! :)
they are sold by G-laderseite.de, see their web site: http://www.g-laderseite.de/eshop/product_info.php?cPath=31_37&products_id=42 (http://www.g-laderseite.de/eshop/product_info.php?cPath=31_37&products_id=42)
micro v's are the same as they use on Corrado's G60and other VAG alternators type drives, they offer more surface area for grip/drive, but still can slip. Toothed don't slip(same as cam belt), but should something go wrong then tooth's are unforgiving, in case of a G-Lader failure the belts will keep driving possibly causing more damage, though I've not heared of many surviving any highspeed failures, I've been running tooth's for about 30k miles no problems at all!! And no slip either!!
ive got myself some toothed pulleys. having trouble fitting them. there seems to not be enough clearence between the antiroll bar mount and the altenator pulley. the pulley is wider than the stock one. anyone else had any trouble fitting toothed pulley kits? or is it the done thing to mod the anti roll bar jobber?
is you car an original or conversion? original g's have a notch in the arb mount which allows better clearance
its a jabba r1 charger. they a totally different charger i assume then?
no it's the normal supercharger but with the inlets and outlet ported.
Quote from: G-spot on November 18, 2008, 01:37:33 PM
should something go wrong then tooth's are unforgiving, in case of a G-Lader failure the belts will keep driving possibly causing more damage
how do you keep an eye on the belt, what i mean is do you reach a certain mileage then replace the belt? or do you just drive it till it snaps then replace? sorry newbie here ::)
not the charger - is the car an original g40 or a conversion?
Quote from: cam_d on November 23, 2008, 07:20:08 PM
Quote from: G-spot on November 18, 2008, 01:37:33 PM
should something go wrong then tooth's are unforgiving, in case of a G-Lader failure the belts will keep driving possibly causing more damage
how do you keep an eye on the belt, what i mean is do you reach a certain mileage then replace the belt? or do you just drive it till it snaps then replace? sorry newbie here ::)
What I mean't was that if you have a mechanical failure in the G-Lader, then your toothed pulley will continue driving your charger as the inside gets minced(this was always my excuse for not fitting then tbh), but as I also said, I now run toothies, and with 30K on them and no belt change yet I'm not reeally worrying too much about it.
to be honest that's going to happen no matter what belts you are running, Even v-belts are that easy to slip that they'll stop the mega soft metal the charger and scroll are made of mashing each other up
the car is original as far as i know. ive got a lot of history for the car but not the actual service book. engine mounts etc all seem nice and strong, not perished etc. have cut the anti roll bar mount to bits and made a new bracket because there wasnt enough room for it to be safe. belt was like 1mm away from anti roll bar mount and pulley was touching. when im finished i could get some pictures so you all can see if you like
no-one i've ever known has had an issue... only with non-g40 arb mounts. weird one
I had to cut a small notch out of the side of my ARB mount to accommodate my toothed belt, but only because mine is a conversion from a GT and didn't have the g40-specific arb mount bracket. If you're having that much of a problem perhaps your engine isn't sat right in the bay? If you loosen engine mounts it is possible to move the engine away from that side using a pry-bar and then tighten the mounts again. Or another possibility is that you have a bent chassis leg.