On the timingbelt for 110 tooth, you use the tension spring that is blue, and on the 127 tooth you use a metal color one.
What is the difference using blue vs metal color? Or why is there 2 type of springs?
BMW E21 318 76 ---> transforming to 323i BMW E21 323i 79 - gone to heaven
BMW F46 220D Xdrive daily driver.
As far as I know these are different sets, not just the belt. A 110 square tooth belt has its own tensioner with different measurements, therefore a different spring as well.
In the 1980's there as a factory recall where most of the M20's were converted to 127 round tooth as these ran smoother. Apart from belt, tensioner and spring, also the 3 cogwheels were replaced. However, I have already encountered several M20's myself that did not have this update, probably because these cars were not dealer-maintained anymore.
Jeroen wrote: Mon Aug 21, 2023 11:17 am
As far as I know these are different sets, not just the belt. A 110 square tooth belt has its own tensioner with different measurements, therefore a different spring as well.
In the 1980's there as a factory recall where most of the M20's were converted to 127 round tooth as these ran smoother. Apart from belt, tensioner and spring, also the 3 cogwheels were replaced. However, I have already encountered several M20's myself that did not have this update, probably because these cars were not dealer-maintained anymore.
So would it be an idea to convert to 127 tooth instead of 110?
Last edited by Atle_323i on Mon Aug 21, 2023 12:23 pm, edited 1 time in total.
BMW E21 318 76 ---> transforming to 323i BMW E21 323i 79 - gone to heaven
BMW F46 220D Xdrive daily driver.
They did change things for a reason, but how serious the problems were, no idea. I tried to dig up the recall service bulletin but no luck sofar, so I can't tell for sure which parts are interchangeable. What I do know is that the 110-tooth parts were getting pretty scarce years ago already.