Pulley Grinding on Cold Start
Recently my 2000 Discovery 2 began making an odd grinding occasionally on cold starts. It started the day after a wheeling trip where I took the wrong line through a water crossing and drove into a pit, the engine got pretty wet. I think whats more significant is it was a long day (8+ hours) of driving. The video attached was filmed that morning, probably between 40-60 degs F. It stopped after 5-10 minutes. The next time it happened, weeks later, was at a camp site after a full day of driving, and again, it stopped after 5-10 minutes. It was also very cold. I haven't been able to reproduce since in similar temperatures.
I don't know if this play in the tensioner pulley is normal, there are no marks on the back that indicate it's ground against the metal.
To me it sounds like one of the top pulleys, but without being able to reproduce I have no way to know for sure.
Any ideas? Thanks guys.
I don't know if this play in the tensioner pulley is normal, there are no marks on the back that indicate it's ground against the metal.
To me it sounds like one of the top pulleys, but without being able to reproduce I have no way to know for sure.
Any ideas? Thanks guys.
Thanks. I have a full set I keep as spare as well as a spare alternator. I just don't know enough to be sure that noise is even a pulley, but it sounds like it? I also have a spare alternator, but I'm guessing my OEM Bosch has a lower chance of failure than the aftermarket I got from Rovers North, so not sure if I should swap it too.
when you replace the belt and pulleys, spin the alternator shaft and see if it is smooth. There should be absolutely no grinding or 'hard to turn' on the alt shaft. Also, before you take everything apart, and with the engine running, you can get a long screwdriver (like 2 foot) or mechanics stethoscope, put the metal end on the alternator and the other end to your ear and listen for the grinding. This is a pretty accurate method to localize the abnormal sound......
and if it goes away after the fix, you found it....
BE SURE to use correct washer spacer for idler pulley (I think it's the idler), sometimes this is missing...
and if it goes away after the fix, you found it....
BE SURE to use correct washer spacer for idler pulley (I think it's the idler), sometimes this is missing...
when you replace the belt and pulleys, spin the alternator shaft and see if it is smooth. There should be absolutely no grinding or 'hard to turn' on the alt shaft. Also, before you take everything apart, and with the engine running, you can get a long screwdriver (like 2 foot) or mechanics stethoscope, put the metal end on the alternator and the other end to your ear and listen for the grinding. This is a pretty accurate method to localize the abnormal sound......
and if it goes away after the fix, you found it....
BE SURE to use correct washer spacer for idler pulley (I think it's the idler), sometimes this is missing...
and if it goes away after the fix, you found it....
BE SURE to use correct washer spacer for idler pulley (I think it's the idler), sometimes this is missing...
Tackling the job tomorrow morning, will let you know how it goes.
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Brandon318
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Nov 9, 2020 05:53 PM
Jeff Blake
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May 24, 2017 03:05 PM



