Timing belt change 98 ES 300
#16
But if you live/drive in a major city, it is not fine.
Other drivers will not let you merge into their lanes.
You will have a hard time changing lanes with no power steering and assisted braking...while the vehicle is rolling to a stop.
And if you are on a major highway, there is a chance you will not make it to the shoulder....
Other drivers will not let you merge into their lanes.
You will have a hard time changing lanes with no power steering and assisted braking...while the vehicle is rolling to a stop.
And if you are on a major highway, there is a chance you will not make it to the shoulder....
Still better safe than sorry, loosing power steering and assisted braking while on a busy multilane motorway would not be fun at all.
#17
Lead Lap
It's alot more manageable than people like to make out. That's by design though, engines fail everyday and people control their cars just fine when that happens.
#18
#19
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Dear Tasmania, yes, the US manual recommends replacement at 90,000 miles. I am surprised by the difference in the recommended interval. 280 k kilometers calculates at 168,000 miles. The ES models are excellent cars if cared for. US Magazine Consumers Report rates them at the top.
JC
JC
Loop
#20
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[QUOTE=Qwerty321;8857430]I
The costliest quote I got was from the dealer, who asked for $930 US
In my case the dealer had it replaced free of charge. But since I wasn't going to buy it otherwise, I guess it was just a different style of haggling.
Loop
The costliest quote I got was from the dealer, who asked for $930 US
In my case the dealer had it replaced free of charge. But since I wasn't going to buy it otherwise, I guess it was just a different style of haggling.
Loop
#21
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Thread Starter
90 k KM vs 90 k Miles
I personally havn't done it knowingly. But I recently just bought a 1999 Windom (ES300) with the 1MZ-FE (VVTi version) and my cars clocked about 190k (km not miles) and there's no record of a cam belt change. In fact there's no sticker or anything either, so it's quite likely my car's never had a cam belt change. I'm getting mine replaced in about a week, but $433 is pretty decent. I got quoted $800 NZD, which is about $623 US to have mine done. The costliest quote I got was from the dealer, who asked for $930 US.
Actually, we're told here to change timing belts every 90,000 KM and you guys are told to change every 90,000 Miles... how does that work?
Though if you have the VVTi 1MZ-FE, it's an interference engine, so a timing belt snap would likely kill your engine, and probably your wallet too.
Actually, we're told here to change timing belts every 90,000 KM and you guys are told to change every 90,000 Miles... how does that work?
Though if you have the VVTi 1MZ-FE, it's an interference engine, so a timing belt snap would likely kill your engine, and probably your wallet too.
I am in a quandary as to why the manual would specify 90,000 KM in certain countries, vs 90,000 Miles in the US. It appears to be an error to me. Perhaps someone in a KM country should bring it to the attention of a Lexus Dealer.
It seems 90,000 KM (54,000 miles) is too short an interval for a timing belt change.
#22
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I am in a quandary as to why the manual would specify 90,000 KM in certain countries, vs 90,000 Miles in the US. It appears to be an error to me. Perhaps someone in a KM country should bring it to the attention of a Lexus Dealer.
It seems 90,000 KM (54,000 miles) is too short an interval for a timing belt change.
I am in a quandary as to why the manual would specify 90,000 KM in certain countries, vs 90,000 Miles in the US. It appears to be an error to me. Perhaps someone in a KM country should bring it to the attention of a Lexus Dealer.
It seems 90,000 KM (54,000 miles) is too short an interval for a timing belt change.
#23
Lexus Test Driver
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I am in a quandary as to why the manual would specify 90,000 KM in certain countries, vs 90,000 Miles in the US. It appears to be an error to me. Perhaps someone in a KM country should bring it to the attention of a Lexus Dealer.
It seems 90,000 KM (54,000 miles) is too short an interval for a timing belt change.
I am in a quandary as to why the manual would specify 90,000 KM in certain countries, vs 90,000 Miles in the US. It appears to be an error to me. Perhaps someone in a KM country should bring it to the attention of a Lexus Dealer.
It seems 90,000 KM (54,000 miles) is too short an interval for a timing belt change.
#24
Rookie
Thread Starter
#26
I know some of the newer Toyotas here say to get the cambelt done every 150k Km, which should be roughly 90 miles right?
#27
Driver School Candidate
Hi all, new to the forum here. Is there a time limit for the timing belt change? With my Hondas, the maintenance schedule says to change the timing belt at either 90k miles or 9 years. Does Lexus suggest something similar? I have a 98 ES300 with only 76k miles, so I'm good on the miles but it's 17 years old now.
#28
Lead Lap
Hi all, new to the forum here. Is there a time limit for the timing belt change? With my Hondas, the maintenance schedule says to change the timing belt at either 90k miles or 9 years. Does Lexus suggest something similar? I have a 98 ES300 with only 76k miles, so I'm good on the miles but it's 17 years old now.
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