Hi @Josmall … Don’t really think the mileage is the issue its more the age of the rubber cam belt….Rubber will degrade and harden over time…and as you change the belt the water pump gets done as a safety measure as it’s relatively cheap to change together …it’s the labour costs that hurt….better be safe than sorry…Have t6 camper conversion and it has just done 35,000. Local van centre advises service plus cambelt + water pump replacement as van reached 4 years (reg'ed March 17).
Are these replacements really necessary in view of low mileage ?
Lots of opinion and info on here regarding this.Have t6 camper conversion and it has just done 35,000. Local van centre advises service plus cambelt + water pump replacement as van reached 4 years (reg'ed March 17).
Are these replacements really necessary in view of low mileage ?
Thanks for your advice. Will bite the bullet !Hi @Josmall … Don’t really think the mileage is the issue its more the age of the rubber cam belt….Rubber will degrade and harden over time…and as you change the belt the water pump gets done as a safety measure as it’s relatively cheap to change together …it’s the labour costs that hurt….better be safe than sorry…
Many thanks. JohnOfficially, yes.
In the UK the cambelt change interval is 4 years regardless of how little mileage you've done.
In mainland Europe the official recommendation is 5 years, so I went with that as I don't see how conditions are any different in, say, Germany, to here, and like you I had very low mileage. I certainly don't suggest that you do what I did, if you do it's at your risk.
If you go a day over the 4 years and if the worst happens, you'll obviously get zero sympathy here or at your dealer, and a massive repair bill!
As with everything, you have to decide if you want to risk not having it done now, bearing in mind the potential consequences.
yes, I asked for all rolling parts to be changed with my scheduled booking in October (5 years)Any jockey rollers to change?
As already mentioned, it’s the condition of the rubber belt.Have t6 camper conversion and it has just done 35,000. Local van centre advises service plus cambelt + water pump replacement as van reached 4 years (reg'ed March 17).
Are these replacements really necessary in view of low mileage ?
Thanks for your reply. Had the auxiliary belt replaced at roughly 30k miles as the tensioner idle wheel bearing developed a squeak/whistling noise.I’d get the aux belt done at the same time @Josmall. It should only be the price of the belt - an extra @£30.
These have been known to fail and take out the cam belt…
I too am sailing in the shark infested waters of year 5 with no cam belt changeI’m currently at approx 50k miles and 5 years, 3 months.
I’ve inspected the belt and I have no concerns.
What’s good for a van in Europe is good here providing you are not relying on VW warranty.
If my van had a shrouded water pump I would have replaced it with a non shrouded unit as the reliability of this pump is poor. A seized pump is going to result in a broken timing belt.
There is no way I would be fitting a shrouded water pump when the belt is replaced.
My experience of manufacturers cure dates with rubber products is up to 8-10 years from manufacture stored in the correct conditions.
Service time is obviously going to be less than storage time.
Most importantly I can afford to repair the engine if it does break, my choice.
You and most German, French, Belgian etc T6 owners who are following the advice given by their dealers - change it at 5 years or X miles.I too am sailing in the shark infested waters of year 5 with no cam belt change
Its up to you, but I pushed mine to 5 years as it's also low mileage.Morning All, My Vw t6 2017 34000miles Is coming up to 4 years old! just spoke to my VW Dealer, major service £378 Cambelt and water pump £576 So £954 All in!!
Officially, yes.
In the UK the cambelt change interval is 4 years regardless of how little mileage you've done.
In mainland Europe the official recommendation is 5 years, so I went with that as I don't see how conditions are any different in, say, Germany, to here, and like you I had very low mileage. I certainly don't suggest that you do what I did, if you do it's at your risk.
If you go a day over the 4 years and if the worst happens, you'll obviously get zero sympathy here or at your dealer, and a massive repair bill!
As with everything, you have to decide if you want to risk not having it done now, bearing in mind the potential consequences.