The BS 5 year timing belt interval is officially dead

The BS 5 year timing belt interval is officially dead

Author
Discussion

Dr G

Original Poster:

15,228 posts

243 months

Tuesday 19th September 2023
quotequote all
This is an excerpt from a document recently issued by the VW UK and shared on the dealer portal:



Whilst the factory guidance has never stated 5 years (or certainly not for a very long time) it was pushed in the UK (cynically as a profit maker) quite heavily and posted on repeat in every owners forum.

It goes on to say:



So there you go. No more getting fleeced for early changes.

AI1601

858 posts

95 months

Tuesday 19th September 2023
quotequote all
If only we had waited a month or so when getting the cambelt changed on the wife's Leon 1.4 TSI. Feel like we've been scammed of £540!

Terzo123

4,330 posts

209 months

Tuesday 19th September 2023
quotequote all
AI1601 said:
If only we had waited a month or so when getting the cambelt changed on the wife's Leon 1.4 TSI. Feel like we've been scammed of £540!
If you have the time and inclination, id be submitting a complaint to Seat. Whats the worst that could happen?

Prior to this, the european intervals for these engines was double the UK recommendation. I never understood why the difference.

Dr G

Original Poster:

15,228 posts

243 months

Tuesday 19th September 2023
quotequote all
AI1601 said:
If only we had waited a month or so when getting the cambelt changed on the wife's Leon 1.4 TSI. Feel like we've been scammed of £540!
Was it done post 4th July?



If so commence moaning at dealer!

Dr G

Original Poster:

15,228 posts

243 months

Tuesday 19th September 2023
quotequote all
Terzo123 said:
Prior to this, the european intervals for these engines was double the UK recommendation. I never understood why the difference.
I've gone on about this for years, they're not even double. The most common belt schedule is 140,000 miles. Not 5 years. Not any number of years. The workshop manual has always been very clear about this, but for some reason the UK arm decided to endorse their franchise operators stroking the cash cow instead.

James6112

4,475 posts

29 months

Wednesday 20th September 2023
quotequote all
I extended the cambelt change interval on my Skoda Superb to 6 years - that was when the water pump decided to start leaking!

Yertis

18,087 posts

267 months

Thursday 21st September 2023
quotequote all
I don't think this applies to my old Audi frown

Every five years cam-belt, tensioner and water pump without fail get changed without fail, even though it's only usually done about 500 miles in that time. Some time back the wisdom went from 75k miles to 50k miles. I wonedr why they've suddenly changed the guidance? I know people who've had a belt go and it's curtains for the engine (and I expect the car too, nowadays).

Dr G

Original Poster:

15,228 posts

243 months

Thursday 21st September 2023
quotequote all
They have and they haven't. The factory guidance hasn't changed in as long as I can remember. As above, workshop manual has never stated a 5 year interval.

Edited by Dr G on Thursday 21st September 16:58

shtu

3,481 posts

147 months

Thursday 21st September 2023
quotequote all
"Catalyst for Aftersales"

What a horrible euphemism.

FMOB

983 posts

13 months

Thursday 21st September 2023
quotequote all
shtu said:
"Catalyst for Aftersales"

What a horrible euphemism.
Exactly what I was thing but looks better than STCAEFO

(screw the customer at every .....)

stevemcs

8,703 posts

94 months

Thursday 21st September 2023
quotequote all
Personally if i owned anything with a 1.6 or 2.0 diesel then I would ignore that and stick to 4.5 years. Petrol's go with the new recommended interval

saladdays

115 posts

66 months

Monday 9th October 2023
quotequote all
Dr G, thanks for posting. I recently had a call from Skoda offering a new belt for £699!

GVK

809 posts

243 months

Monday 30th October 2023
quotequote all
Whats changed though? It's not like they are going to fit some wonderful belt that will last over 5 years.

Dr G

Original Poster:

15,228 posts

243 months

Tuesday 31st October 2023
quotequote all
GVK said:
Whats changed though? It's not like they are going to fit some wonderful belt that will last over 5 years.
That's exactly the case, yes. The 5 year interval was not the manufacturer recommendation, it was a money grab from VW in the UK.

stevemcs

8,703 posts

94 months

Tuesday 31st October 2023
quotequote all
I'd still be changing the belts if it was a 2.0 diesel.

POIDH

828 posts

66 months

Tuesday 31st October 2023
quotequote all
How will this be communicated to those outside of VAG dealer network?

I use a good independent who it still adamant that it is 5 years and needs 'proof' from VAG before he 'risks' customer cars and repuatation.

Belle427

9,046 posts

234 months

Tuesday 31st October 2023
quotequote all
Another VAG farce really.

VeeReihenmotor6

2,191 posts

176 months

Tuesday 31st October 2023
quotequote all
Nice but I have had it ingrained in me to change at 5 years / c75k so will probably just stick with it. Lucky for me, my recently acquired 4 year old Audi 2.0 TDI had it's cambelt/waterpump etc done on it's company (car) service plan at 68k / 4 years old.

POIDH

828 posts

66 months

Tuesday 31st October 2023
quotequote all
I am also reminded that I have paid for 5 timing belts on VAG cars over the years - with another looming shortly.

Will VAG produce a list of which cars this covers, rather than 'speak to your local main stealer'?

Dr G

Original Poster:

15,228 posts

243 months

Wednesday 1st November 2023
quotequote all
POIDH said:
How will this be communicated to those outside of VAG dealer network?

I use a good independent who it still adamant that it is 5 years and needs 'proof' from VAG before he 'risks' customer cars and repuatation.
Exactly the same way it always has been. The 5 year "guidance" was never communicated to anyone outside of the dealer network. The data on Erwin/Elsa remains correct.