V70 - Cambelt change £?
Discussion
Hi and sorry for resurrecting this old thread. Can I ask you who the Volvo-specialist indy is who did the cam-belt change?
Mine is up for change (2006 XC70) and I would like to get it done for a similar price to yours. I'm in North London but don't mind travelling a bit to save a few bob.
Thanks.
Mine is up for change (2006 XC70) and I would like to get it done for a similar price to yours. I'm in North London but don't mind travelling a bit to save a few bob.
Thanks.
Cmabelt with tensioner change on these books at 1.2 or 1.3 hours depending on whether old/new V70. I've seen experience mechanics who have done one before do them in 40 minutes - they are just about the easiest and quickest cambelt to change you can imagine.
If you consider a typical independent garage charges £50/hour then there is really no reason why it should cost more than £60-£70 in labour. The kits can easily be bought for £70-£80 from the usual Eurocaparts like places.
There really is no reason why a cambelt change for a D5 should cost over £150 if you shop around.
If you consider a typical independent garage charges £50/hour then there is really no reason why it should cost more than £60-£70 in labour. The kits can easily be bought for £70-£80 from the usual Eurocaparts like places.
There really is no reason why a cambelt change for a D5 should cost over £150 if you shop around.
kapiteinlangzaam said:
confused_buyer said:
Cmabelt with tensioner change on these books at 1.2 or 1.3 hours depending on whether old/new V70. I've seen experience mechanics who have done one before do them in 40 minutes - they are just about the easiest and quickest cambelt to change you can imagine.
If you consider a typical independent garage charges £50/hour then there is really no reason why it should cost more than £60-£70 in labour. The kits can easily be bought for £70-£80 from the usual Eurocaparts like places.
There really is no reason why a cambelt change for a D5 should cost over £150 if you shop around.
The only thing id say is that I would only buy genuine OE Volvo for the belts and tensioners.If you consider a typical independent garage charges £50/hour then there is really no reason why it should cost more than £60-£70 in labour. The kits can easily be bought for £70-£80 from the usual Eurocaparts like places.
There really is no reason why a cambelt change for a D5 should cost over £150 if you shop around.
Apologies for the diversion, but this thread just came up in a search I did and so I thought some of the resident Volvoscienti might be able to assist.
I am considering a V70 or XC70 as a work horse / dog car. Given the remit, I am looking at high milers. They appear to wear the miles well, but a lot of them look to be due a cambelt change. It seems the interval is 100k and I'd like to find one that has been done or else I will factor the cost into my negotiations if the car is about due or overdue. Am I about right with the 100k interval? Google says so, but you do see differences of opinion and I am not interested in chancing it. If anything, I'd do it early.
While I am at it, I have no particular need for a diesel, although most of these cars are diesels. Is the petrol 2.5T reliable? I'd expect it to be thirsty, of course! I favour a manual as I believe the Geartronic boxes are a bit prone to failure. Any contrary views on that?
Thanks,
Andy
I am considering a V70 or XC70 as a work horse / dog car. Given the remit, I am looking at high milers. They appear to wear the miles well, but a lot of them look to be due a cambelt change. It seems the interval is 100k and I'd like to find one that has been done or else I will factor the cost into my negotiations if the car is about due or overdue. Am I about right with the 100k interval? Google says so, but you do see differences of opinion and I am not interested in chancing it. If anything, I'd do it early.
While I am at it, I have no particular need for a diesel, although most of these cars are diesels. Is the petrol 2.5T reliable? I'd expect it to be thirsty, of course! I favour a manual as I believe the Geartronic boxes are a bit prone to failure. Any contrary views on that?
Thanks,
Andy
Edited by Andy Meads on Sunday 30th October 12:48
Andy Meads said:
Apologies for the diversion, but this thread just came up in a search I did and so I thought some of the resident Volvoscienti might be able to assist.
I am considering a V70 or XC70 as a work horse / dog car. Given the remit, I am looking at high milers. They appear to wear the miles well, but a lot of them look to be due a cambelt change. It seems the interval is 100k and I'd like to find one that has been done or else I will factor the cost into my negotiations if the car is about due or overdue. Am I about right with the 100k interval? Google says so, but you do see differences of opinion and I am not interested in chancing it. If anything, I'd do it early.
While I am at it, I have no particular need for a diesel, although most of these cars are diesels. Is the petrol 2.5T reliable? I'd expect it to be thirsty, of course! I favour a manual as I believe the Geartronic boxes are a bit prone to failure. Any contrary views on that?
Thanks,
Andy
my 2004 XC70 2.5T has reached 250,000 km and still feels nice to drive. Had a couple of issues; water pump went at about 150,000. main computer failed at 200,000 (AUS$ 1800). Auto gearbox 'clunks' hard into lower gear sometimes after coasting to a junction. Reasonable economy, I average about 9-10 litres per 100 km (whatever that is in mpg) although i do very little town driving. I am considering a V70 or XC70 as a work horse / dog car. Given the remit, I am looking at high milers. They appear to wear the miles well, but a lot of them look to be due a cambelt change. It seems the interval is 100k and I'd like to find one that has been done or else I will factor the cost into my negotiations if the car is about due or overdue. Am I about right with the 100k interval? Google says so, but you do see differences of opinion and I am not interested in chancing it. If anything, I'd do it early.
While I am at it, I have no particular need for a diesel, although most of these cars are diesels. Is the petrol 2.5T reliable? I'd expect it to be thirsty, of course! I favour a manual as I believe the Geartronic boxes are a bit prone to failure. Any contrary views on that?
Thanks,
Andy
Edited by Andy Meads on Sunday 30th October 12:48
Edited by mungral on Friday 11th November 07:09
Gassing Station | Volvo & Polestar | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff