Russ in CT
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- November 11, 2002
- Messages
- 176
- Reaction score
- 0
- City, State
- Milford, CT
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- '99 XLT
Some may recall my tribulations with my timing chains (4.0 SOHC ’99 Ex). Local mechanic did the jackshaft chain & tensioner, front cassette, and both front & rear tensioners. All was good for two days, then all of a sudden I’m getting a LOUD ticking/clanking noise. Sounds like chain against metal. To me it sounded like it was coming from bottom front of motor, and I concluded it must be the balance tensioner (which they did not replace), and that they must have damaged it repairing adjacent components (which I had read on this board has happened to people), while mechanic insists this new noise is coming from the rear cassette (which he did not replace), that noise is radiating to front of motor through jackshaft and only sounds like it’s the front. He said no way new noise is the balance tensioner, not possible.
Mechanic dropped oil pan, and found a couple of pieces of flat spring steel, and a piece of plastic, which he said looked like they came from the rear cassette guide. Mechanic offered to pull engine, find problem, and if its his fault, he pays to fix it, not his fault, I pay to fix it plus his labor to investigate. But when I tried to define ‘his fault’ to be that the balance tensioner was broken and causing the new noise, now he is saying even it IS the balance tensioner, it can’t be his fault. If it’s the balance tensioner, it must have been total coincidence that it failed two days after they did the adjacent repairs. Note, I was later able to positively ID pieces found in pan as from the balance tensioner, but haven’t told mechanic that yet.
Mechanic is saying he talked to several Ford Techs that work on these engines all the time, and that they’ve never seen a balance tensioner go bad, and that even if one did go bad, it couldn’t possibly be due to anything done during the replacement of the nearby jackshaft chain & tensioner (and front cassette, etc). No way it could be his fault.
So my question is, especially for any Ford Techs out there, what have you seen? I’ve heard the balance tensioner can become very fragile, and breaks easily. But could it have been damaged when doing a replacement of the nearby jackshaft chain & tensioner (& front cassette, etc)? The tensioner is kinda down inside the pan (ladder frame), and they did not remove pan for this repair, so they couldn’t have manhandled tensioner directly. But I’m sure they must have wrenched the engine forwards and backwards lining things up, to get those timing chain locking jigs in place, etc, could cranking engine backwards have caused it? Is it really likely just a total coincidence that the balance tensioner let go just two days after these other repairs?
Mechanic dropped oil pan, and found a couple of pieces of flat spring steel, and a piece of plastic, which he said looked like they came from the rear cassette guide. Mechanic offered to pull engine, find problem, and if its his fault, he pays to fix it, not his fault, I pay to fix it plus his labor to investigate. But when I tried to define ‘his fault’ to be that the balance tensioner was broken and causing the new noise, now he is saying even it IS the balance tensioner, it can’t be his fault. If it’s the balance tensioner, it must have been total coincidence that it failed two days after they did the adjacent repairs. Note, I was later able to positively ID pieces found in pan as from the balance tensioner, but haven’t told mechanic that yet.
Mechanic is saying he talked to several Ford Techs that work on these engines all the time, and that they’ve never seen a balance tensioner go bad, and that even if one did go bad, it couldn’t possibly be due to anything done during the replacement of the nearby jackshaft chain & tensioner (and front cassette, etc). No way it could be his fault.
So my question is, especially for any Ford Techs out there, what have you seen? I’ve heard the balance tensioner can become very fragile, and breaks easily. But could it have been damaged when doing a replacement of the nearby jackshaft chain & tensioner (& front cassette, etc)? The tensioner is kinda down inside the pan (ladder frame), and they did not remove pan for this repair, so they couldn’t have manhandled tensioner directly. But I’m sure they must have wrenched the engine forwards and backwards lining things up, to get those timing chain locking jigs in place, etc, could cranking engine backwards have caused it? Is it really likely just a total coincidence that the balance tensioner let go just two days after these other repairs?