One of those "never noticed/thought about that before" things.
Recently replaced the alternator with a used one. Had a squeal after replacement, which has worsened, and the belt, driving off the crankshaft pulley to alternator and water pump, now looks badly worn, with missing teeth.
It seems possible the new-to-me alternator has a bad bearing, which has stressed the belt, or it could be it was just due for a coincidental failure. The car seems to drive OK (briefly, since no water pump drive) without the belt so clutch release bearings etc dont seem to be part of the problem.
I can't remember if the drive belts on my previous smooth V-pulley setups had teeth. though I'm pretty sure early ones didn't. and I wonder if the wrong belt might have been fitted.
Teeth (or rather the gaps between them) could allow greater flex of the belt, reducing internal frictional losses. OTOH the Internyet seems to make a simple distinction between V belts (which are smooth) and synchronous belts like timing belts (which have teeth or cogs, because slip is not tolerable).
https://www.linearmotiontips.com/synchronous-belt-v-belt-motion-design/
Do your V-belts have teeth (if you still have V-belts)?
Edited by edlithgow on 02/09/2021 at 03:47
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