Timing Belt

Timing Belt

A timing belt is a toothed, fibre-reinforced belt that keeps an engine's crankshaft and camshaft rotating in a precise relationship. Its teeth engage dedicated sprockets so the valves open at the intended point in each piston cycle. Some engines also use it to drive a water pump, balance shaft or fuel pump. Loss of timing can stop the engine immediately and, on many designs, allow pistons and valves to collide.

Belts differ in length, width, tooth count, tooth profile, cord construction and rubber compound. Conventional versions run dry behind covers; belt-in-oil systems use a specifically engineered material inside the lubricated engine. Visual similarity is not enough. The belt must match the exact engine, production revision, sprockets, tensioning arrangement and operating environment.

Choose using registration or VIN, engine code, build date and current service information. Confirm the printed reference, dimensions, directional marking and any manufacturer supersession. Establish whether the repair requires a complete belt kit, water pump, idlers, tensioner, seals, covers, auxiliary belt or single-use fasteners. A new belt fitted around worn or leaking components does not restore the system's reliability.

Follow the specified replacement interval by both age and mileage. Many belts give no warning before failure, while covers hide most of their length. Visible cracks, fraying, missing tooth fabric, polished edges, oil or coolant contamination, belt dust, tracking marks and abnormal noise demand prompt investigation, but an apparently clean belt is not proof of remaining service life.

Timing work requires the correct locking, holding and tensioning tools. Support the engine safely where mountings are removed, repair leaks, keep the new belt clean and never rely on paint marks alone. Set the crankshaft and camshaft at the prescribed position, tension at the stated temperature and direction, torque every fastener correctly, then rotate by hand and recheck timing before starting. Timing belts matching the selected vehicle are listed below.

Your Current Vehicle

Or

Select Your Vehicle

Filter products

The highest price is £177.54
£
£

2 Products

Popular Models and Vehicle Options for Timing Belt

VW Car Parts

VW GOLF

22 matching products

audi car parts

AUDI A6

20 matching products

VW Car Parts

VW PASSAT

20 matching products

audi car parts

AUDI A4

18 matching products

ford car parts

FORD FIESTA

17 matching products

VW Car Parts

VW POLO

16 matching products

seat car parts

SEAT TOLEDO

15 matching products

Vauxhall Car Parts

VAUXHALL ASTRA

15 matching products

seat car parts

SEAT IBIZA

14 matching products

Skoda Car Parts

SKODA OCTAVIA

14 matching products

audi car parts

AUDI 100

13 matching products

ford car parts

FORD FOCUS

13 matching products

seat car parts

SEAT LEON

13 matching products

audi car parts

AUDI A3

12 matching products

Fiat Car Parts

FIAT DUCATO

12 matching products

ford car parts

FORD MONDEO

12 matching products

Honda Car Parts

HONDA CIVIC

12 matching products

mitsubishi car parts

MITSUBISHI GALANT

12 matching products

opel car parts

OPEL ASTRA

12 matching products

VW Car Parts

VW TRANSPORTER

12 matching products

CITROËN Car Parts

CITROËN C5

11 matching products

mitsubishi car parts

MITSUBISHI LANCER

11 matching products

Peugeot Car Parts

PEUGEOT 206

11 matching products

renault car parts

RENAULT CLIO

11 matching products

seat car parts

SEAT CORDOBA

11 matching products

ford car parts

FORD ESCORT

10 matching products

renault car parts

RENAULT LAGUNA

10 matching products

Volvo Car Parts

VOLVO S40

10 matching products

VW Car Parts

VW CADDY

10 matching products

VW Car Parts

VW JETTA

10 matching products

audi car parts

AUDI 80

9 matching products

hyundai car parts

HYUNDAI SONATA

9 matching products

mitsubishi car parts

MITSUBISHI L200

9 matching products

opel car parts

OPEL CORSA

9 matching products

opel car parts

OPEL VECTRA

9 matching products

Peugeot Car Parts

PEUGEOT 307

9 matching products

Peugeot Car Parts

PEUGEOT 407

9 matching products

renault car parts

RENAULT ESPACE

9 matching products

renault car parts

RENAULT MASTER

9 matching products

renault car parts

RENAULT MEGANE

9 matching products

Skoda Car Parts

SKODA SUPERB

9 matching products

Toyota Car Parts

TOYOTA COROLLA

9 matching products

CITROËN Car Parts

CITROËN C3

8 matching products

CITROËN Car Parts

CITROËN C4

8 matching products

Fiat Car Parts

FIAT ULYSSE

8 matching products

hyundai car parts

HYUNDAI LANTRA

8 matching products

mitsubishi car parts

MITSUBISHI COLT

8 matching products

mitsubishi car parts

MITSUBISHI PAJERO

8 matching products

renault car parts

RENAULT KANGOO

8 matching products

Rover Car Parts

ROVER 200

8 matching products

seat car parts

SEAT ALTEA

8 matching products

seat car parts

SEAT ALTEA XL

8 matching products

Toyota Car Parts

TOYOTA CELICA

8 matching products

Toyota Car Parts

TOYOTA COROLLA Compact

8 matching products

Vauxhall Car Parts

VAUXHALL CAVALIER

8 matching products

Vauxhall Car Parts

VAUXHALL COMBO

8 matching products

Volvo Car Parts

VOLVO V40

8 matching products

audi car parts

AUDI COUPE

7 matching products

audi car parts

AUDI TT

7 matching products

CITROËN Car Parts

CITROËN BERLINGO

7 matching products

CITROËN Car Parts

CITROËN XSARA

7 matching products

Fiat Car Parts

FIAT DOBLO

7 matching products

ford car parts

FORD ORION

7 matching products

ford car parts

FORD TRANSIT

7 matching products

Iveco Car Parts

IVECO DAILY

7 matching products

Lancia Car Parts

LANCIA DELTA

7 matching products

mitsubishi car parts

MITSUBISHI ECLIPSE

7 matching products

mitsubishi car parts

MITSUBISHI L 300

7 matching products

opel car parts

OPEL KADETT E

7 matching products

Peugeot Car Parts

PEUGEOT 607

7 matching products

Peugeot Car Parts

PEUGEOT PARTNER

7 matching products

seat car parts

SEAT CORDOBA Vario

7 matching products

seat car parts

SEAT EXEO

7 matching products

seat car parts

SEAT EXEO ST

7 matching products

Volvo Car Parts

VOLVO V70

7 matching products

VW Car Parts

VW SCIROCCO

7 matching products

VW Car Parts

VW TOURAN

7 matching products

Alfa Romeo Car Parts

ALFA ROMEO 145

6 matching products

Alfa Romeo Car Parts

ALFA ROMEO 146

6 matching products

audi car parts

AUDI A8

6 matching products

CITROËN Car Parts

CITROËN C2

6 matching products

CITROËN Car Parts

CITROËN C8

6 matching products

CITROËN Car Parts

CITROËN DISPATCH

6 matching products

CITROËN Car Parts

CITROËN RELAY

6 matching products

Fiat Car Parts

FIAT DUCATO Panorama

6 matching products

Fiat Car Parts

FIAT PUNTO

6 matching products

ford car parts

FORD C-MAX

6 matching products

ford car parts

FORD S-MAX

6 matching products

ford car parts

FORD SIERRA

6 matching products

ford car parts

FORD TOURNEO CONNECT

6 matching products

ford car parts

FORD TRANSIT CONNECT

6 matching products

Honda Car Parts

HONDA ACCORD

6 matching products

kia car parts

KIA SPORTAGE

6 matching products

land-rover car parts

LAND ROVER FREELANDER

6 matching products

mitsubishi car parts

MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER

6 matching products

opel car parts

OPEL COMBO

6 matching products

Peugeot Car Parts

PEUGEOT 106

6 matching products

Peugeot Car Parts

PEUGEOT 807

6 matching products

Peugeot Car Parts

PEUGEOT BOXER

6 matching products

Peugeot Car Parts

PEUGEOT EXPERT

6 matching products

renault car parts

RENAULT SAFRANE

6 matching products

renault car parts

RENAULT TRAFIC

6 matching products

Rover Car Parts

ROVER 25

6 matching products

Rover Car Parts

ROVER 400

6 matching products

seat car parts

SEAT ALHAMBRA

6 matching products

seat car parts

SEAT INCA

6 matching products

Toyota Car Parts

TOYOTA CARINA E

6 matching products

Toyota Car Parts

TOYOTA LAND CRUISER

6 matching products

Vauxhall Car Parts

VAUXHALL CORSA

6 matching products

Volvo Car Parts

VOLVO S80

6 matching products

Volvo Car Parts

VOLVO V50

6 matching products

VW Car Parts

VW BORA

6 matching products

VW Car Parts

VW NEW BEETLE

6 matching products

VW Car Parts

VW SHARAN

6 matching products

audi car parts

AUDI 90

5 matching products

audi car parts

AUDI A5

5 matching products

audi car parts

AUDI B3

5 matching products

audi car parts

AUDI Q5

5 matching products

CITROËN Car Parts

CITROËN C6

5 matching products

CITROËN Car Parts

CITROËN SAXO

5 matching products

CITROËN Car Parts

CITROËN SYNERGIE

5 matching products

CITROËN Car Parts

CITROËN XSARA PICASSO

5 matching products

dacia car parts

DACIA LOGAN

5 matching products

dacia car parts

DACIA LOGAN MCV

5 matching products

dacia car parts

DACIA SANDERO

5 matching products

Fiat Car Parts

FIAT BRAVO

5 matching products

Fiat Car Parts

FIAT PANDA

5 matching products

The timing belt's job inside a four-stroke engine

The crankshaft completes two revolutions for each camshaft revolution in a conventional four-stroke cycle. A timing belt preserves that 2:1 relationship while controlling the exact phase between pistons and valves. Its tooth engagement prevents the deliberate slip used by an auxiliary friction belt.

Combustion irregularity, acceleration and camshaft valve-spring forces create a changing load. The belt, sprockets and tension system must absorb these pulses while keeping phase error within a narrow engineered range.

Timing-belt anatomy

FeatureFunctionTypical damage
Tensile cordsLimit belt stretch and carry longitudinal force.Kink damage, fatigue or rupture.
Toothed rubber bodyForms the pitch and transfers torque into sprockets.Root cracking or tooth separation.
Tooth facingControls friction and wear at engagement.Polishing, fraying or exposed rubber.
BackingProtects cords and may run over smooth rollers.Glazing, transverse cracks and scoring.
EdgesReveal tracking and alignment condition.Feathering, cord exposure or material loss.
Printed marksIdentify part and may assist initial alignment.Fading is not itself a structural failure.

Tooth profile is a precision specification

Pitch, flank curve, depth and root radius are designed together with the sprocket. Older trapezoidal profiles and later curvilinear families distribute load differently. The wrong profile may share a tooth count yet ride incorrectly, concentrate stress and generate debris.

Belt width also determines load capacity and tracking. Never trim a belt or substitute one merely because it can be placed around the sprockets. Read the exact application data and verify against the removed component without treating an old stretched or damaged belt as the only authority.

Dry and wet timing belts

Conventional dry drive

A dry belt operates behind protective covers but outside the engine's oil system. Camshaft or crankshaft seal leakage, coolant from a pump and solvent used during repair can attack its compound. Belt dressing has no place on a synchronous drive.

Belt in oil

A wet belt is formulated to operate in engine oil and may reduce noise and packaging space. Its durability depends on the exact oil approval, service interval, temperature and control of fuel dilution. Detached material can obstruct oil pickups and small galleries.

Do not cross-apply service rules

A wet belt is not immune to fluid-related degradation, and a dry belt cannot tolerate lubrication. Follow engine-specific inspection dimensions, sump checks and renewal procedures rather than general belt advice.

Selecting the exact belt

EvidenceVariation it resolvesAction
Engine codeTooth count, routing and profile.Use the complete code, not capacity alone.
VIN/build dateMid-year drive revisions.Observe production breaks and supersessions.
Current belt markingUseful cross-check of fitted configuration.Investigate disagreement with catalogue data.
Width and tooth countLoad rating and timing geometry.Count and measure before installation if required.
Tooth formSprocket engagement family.Never decide from overall length alone.
Direction arrowsSpecified running orientation.Fit as marked and do not reverse a used belt.
Service bulletinUpdated belt or companion components.Use the approved package in full.

Why belt-only replacement is often incomplete

The tensioner and idlers have bearings, springs and damping elements exposed to the same heat and running hours. A rough roller can overheat or shred a new belt. A weak tensioner can allow tooth jump; excessive or wrongly set tension overloads bearings and the water pump.

When the timing belt drives the coolant pump, access overlaps and pump seizure can destroy the belt. Many service schedules therefore specify a kit or make combined renewal prudent. Decide from manufacturer instructions, history and component condition rather than price alone.

Intervals, age and operating conditions

Observe the earlier of the time and distance limits. Low annual mileage still accumulates ageing, condensation and starting cycles. High-temperature operation, dust, oil leakage and repeated short journeys may fall under severe-service guidance.

If history is unknown, establish evidence from invoices and reliable records. A handwritten date on a cover is useful but not conclusive. Do not extend an interval because the small visible section looks sound.

Inspection findings and what they mean

FindingLikely mechanismRequired response
Edge frayingMisalignment, flange contact or bearing movement.Find the tracking cause and renew affected parts.
Tooth-root cracksAge, heat, wrong tension or profile mismatch.Replace; inspect sprockets and tension system.
Missing tooth fabricAdvanced engagement fatigue or contamination.Do not continue running the engine.
Glossy backingRoller slip, excessive heat or surface wear.Check every roller and the belt path.
Oil-softened surfaceSeal or breather-system leakage.Repair the leak and replace contaminated parts.
Belt dust inside coverAbrasion, alignment or tooth engagement problem.Identify the source before fitting a belt.
Whine or chirpTension, alignment, bearing or cover contact.Stop and diagnose promptly.

Interference-engine risk

On an interference engine, pistons and fully open valves occupy overlapping space at different times. A broken or jumped belt can bend valves, damage pistons, break followers or harm the cylinder head. Non-interference designs may avoid contact but still stop suddenly, which is hazardous in traffic.

If timing has been lost, do not repeatedly crank the engine. Establish the correct assessment procedure; compression, leak-down or controlled inspection may be required after mechanical timing is considered.

Preparation and locking

Obtain engine-specific data before dismantling: datum positions, locking tools, tension direction, fastener torques, replacement bolts and engine-mount support points. Disconnect power only as prescribed and protect radio, window or hybrid system requirements.

Locking pins locate components; they are not always designed to resist bolt-loosening torque. Use the specified counter-hold tool. Paint marks cannot reveal a slipped pulley, floating camshaft or incorrect initial timing.

Installation principles

  1. Set the engine to the stated reference position before removing the old belt.
  2. Support the power unit safely before releasing any mount.
  3. Fit locks and counter-holds according to their intended purpose.
  4. Release tension in the specified direction and remove components without turning shafts independently.
  5. Inspect sprockets, seals, covers, mounting faces, rollers and driven pumps.
  6. Install the clean belt in its marked direction, keeping the loaded spans correctly seated.
  7. Set the tensioner pointer at the specified engine position and temperature.
  8. Use new single-use fasteners and angle tightening where required.
  9. Remove locks and rotate the crankshaft slowly by hand for the stated number of turns.
  10. Return to datum, refit the locks without force and recheck tension.

Resistance during hand rotation must be investigated, not overcome with leverage. Keep hands, tools and loose clothing away during the first controlled start and observe belt tracking only with covers managed by the approved procedure.

Water pumps, coolant and seals

For a timing-driven pump, verify impeller, tooth form, rotation, gasket and flange depth. Clean the sealing face without gouging it. Use sealant only when specified; excess can enter the cooling system or hold the pump out of alignment.

Refill with the exact coolant specification and mixture, bleed the system, confirm heater operation and check for leakage when cold and hot. A cam or crank seal should not be replaced casually without correct installation tools, yet any active leak must be resolved before it contaminates the belt.

Common mistakes

  • Buying by vehicle model while ignoring engine code and build break.
  • Renewing only the belt while leaving rough rollers in service.
  • Turning crankshaft and camshafts independently on an interference engine.
  • Using locking pins as counter-hold tools.
  • Setting tension at the wrong position, direction or temperature.
  • Contaminating the belt with oil, coolant, grease or dirty gloves.
  • Reusing torque-to-yield crank or mounting bolts.
  • Starting before hand rotation and datum recheck.

UK safety and MOT relevance

The timing belt is not normally exposed for a routine MOT inspection, but its failure can stop the engine without warning. Incorrect timing can cause misfire, excessive emissions or an illuminated malfunction indicator lamp, all of which may affect roadworthiness and the MOT result.

After repair, secure every engine mount, cover, hose and wiring clip. A test certificate cannot confirm internal belt condition or replace the scheduled maintenance record.

Practical timing-belt FAQs

Q: What does a timing belt do?
A: It keeps crankshaft and camshaft rotation synchronised so valves operate at the correct time.

Q: When should a timing belt be changed?
A: At the engine-specific age or mileage limit, whichever arrives first.

Q: Can a belt look good but still be overdue?
A: Yes. Most of it is hidden and internal ageing is not always visible.

Q: What happens if the timing belt breaks?
A: The engine stops and an interference design can sustain severe internal damage.

Q: Should the tensioner be changed with the belt?
A: Usually follow the specified complete-kit procedure because its failure can ruin the new belt.

Q: Should the water pump be replaced too?
A: Often when timing-driven or sharing access, subject to the engine's service guidance.

Q: Can oil on a timing belt be wiped off?
A: No. Repair the leak and replace a contaminated dry belt.

Q: Is a wet timing belt maintenance-free?
A: No. Correct approved oil, intervals and engine-specific inspections remain essential.

Q: Can I reuse a removed timing belt?
A: Only if an explicit procedure permits it and its direction, condition and history are controlled.

Q: Why is a new timing belt whining?
A: Incorrect tension, alignment, roller or cover contact must be checked immediately.

Q: Are paint marks enough for installation?
A: No. Use the specified datum positions, locks and counter-holding tools.

Q: Does a timing belt need running in?
A: No special driving routine usually applies, but timing, tracking, leaks and coolant must be verified.

Q: Can timing-belt trouble affect an MOT?
A: Indirectly through emissions, misfire, warnings or unsafe engine operation.