Mercedes Benz Timing Chain Tensioner can be reused. In the above video I explain how. Part no.: A 271 050 09 11 For more info contact Iqbal Aniff email: mototech@mweb.co.za
Thank you so much I'm so happy you're intelligent enough to be so patient to explain it to people like me at the door trying to get my car fixed I'm so over watching videos about obnoxious intelligent people being rude and suggesting that everything you do is a waste of time but spent $3,000 on the engine they have no empathy for people who are just trying to get by I really appreciate this video I'm going to try it and I'll reply if it works
you are a real engineer! thank you very much! from Mexico. Mercedes really lost a lot of confidence this time. Their company inside problems really took a lot of people money and trust.
thank you sir. I needed to reuse new tensioner and I was thinking of buying another new one but after watching this video I successfully reset the tensioner.
Thank you very much! I just did mine and works rather well. I found if you hear the first click your ok but if you keep pushing till the second one then your too far. The second click is the sound of the snap ring passing over its proper spot and onto the second hole. Anyway works well, good trick. I like saving money!
Thanks for the video! Once you return it back to its original position, do you just install it? How does one ensure the tensioner is properly installed? I screwed my tensioner back into its bracket but don’t know if there is anything else that should be done. Have searched everywhere for proper installation instructions but no luck
hi All you have to do is tighten the tension and once that is tight then you need to turn the engine anti clockwise approximately 90 degrees at the crankshaft pulley bolt to activate the tension. If you listen carefully you will hear the tension plunger move forward. The plunger part must move forward and touch the tensioner rail so that there is always tension on the rail pushing the chain. This is the most important part because most people do not check if the actual plunger came out. You can read comments of mine to other people that will probably help as well.
Thank you John If you planning doing a timing chain replacement then I would advise you to read my reply to Sergey Kravtsov. It would make your task much easier. Good luck
@@iqbalaniff1650 Hi Iqbal, I have read your reply to Sergey , and have taken note of your advice. My engine is a W201 1987, I replaced the chain tensioner today, and discovered that it of a different design to the one in your video. It is simpler to set it back to zero position. I have the engine stripped down, although it is still in the car. The cylinder head is removed, and the pistons out of the block. Tomorrow I am going to feed new timing chain through the guides.
No it will not It is best you change the timing chain,tensioner,guides and gears all together also an oil change with filter is essential. From my experience I have discovered that 5W40 fully synthetic engine oil works best on these engines. Hope this helps
It always best to replace all the timing chain components when doing a vehicle with high mileage however if you want to save money and do a repair on a budget then inspect and replace just the parts that needs replacing but the timing chain must always be replaced.
Thanks for the video - how do you access the tensioner on the W168 - just remove the airbox or is there more to remove? Any precautions, or simply remove and refit?
Hi Sergey That is correct and an important step is to release the tensioner - you must turn the engine 90 degrees anti clockwise and then back to TDC (if you listen carefully you will hear the tensioner release thereafter turn the engine 3 full turns clockwise and make sure your timing marks are aligned. Just a word of caution please do not take the O/T (TDC )mark on the crank pulley to be correct. I have had issues with the damper pulley moving on the rubber mounting. Remove the number one spark plug and put a long screwdriver and double check if the crank pulley damper is correct. Good luck.
Good video and smart man, but honestly don’t risk it and just buy a new one. I reused my tensioner and a year later caused major engine issue because apparently it was never deployed/released. It was jammed.
I am just pleased that people know the procedure and not spend money on purchasing a new tensioner. The rest is up to them how they go about doing it and their level of mechanical experience. Regards
Sorry my friend couldn't quite hear what you were trying to explain, as far as I could make out you were finding it very difficult to release the cir clip?.??
Can any one tell me why it is nessesary to have that locking feature in the tensioner. if it is constantly pushing out (towards the chain) why woudl there be any reason to lock it from going back?
Let's begin with a newly installed chain & tensioner. The tensioner is used to put tension on the chain to prevent skipping as the chain [ and engine ] accelerates and de-accelerate as you drive. With use and wear the chain gets longer, you want the tensioner to snap out [ longer ] to take up the slack, Also on starting and heavy acceleration or de-acceleration you don't want the forces to retract the tensioner. .
When the car is accelerating the crankshaft below, is pulling and tugging on the camshaft above, to operate the valves. when you take your foot of the gas, the Crankshaft slows down first pulling and tugging on the opposite side of the chain where the tensioner is located.[ it's like riding a bike with a fixed gear sprocket ] Without the locking mechanism, the tensioner would collapse [ get shorter ] and the chain can skip.
always when you change the chain you put on a new tensioner. This is drusety not repair and no mechanics are used in workshops unless someone alone but do you spend a lot of 30 euros on the tensioner
NO...it's perfectly designed...one time use so you will have to buy another $130 tensioner...and you can't complain if you put a used tensioner in and it fails
Thank you so much I'm so happy you're intelligent enough to be so patient to explain it to people like me at the door trying to get my car fixed I'm so over watching videos about obnoxious intelligent people being rude and suggesting that everything you do is a waste of time but spent $3,000 on the engine they have no empathy for people who are just trying to get by I really appreciate this video I'm going to try it and I'll reply if it works
Great video, saved me 100 bucks from having to buy another new tensioner because i had installed it once already. 👍👍
Thank you very much Iqbal. It saved my day. I had been trying to figure out how the hell the plunger could be lock in. You are great.
you are a real engineer! thank you very much! from Mexico. Mercedes really lost a lot of confidence this time. Their company inside problems really took a lot of people money and trust.
Very good instructional video, have to fit one of these tomorrow, good to know how it works. Cheers
thank you for taking the time to properly explain this procedure your effort is much appreciated
Bhaot sukriya bhai yeh video banane ka is video se me sahi time par gadi ka kam khatam huaa ☺☺☺☺
thank you sir. I needed to reuse new tensioner and I was thinking of buying another new one but after watching this video I successfully reset the tensioner.
greetings from romania nice and helpful video
Thank You very much, You saved us, we accidently opend a new one😁. With Your help we saved it.
Thank you very much! I just did mine and works rather well. I found if you hear the first click your ok but if you keep pushing till the second one then your too far. The second click is the sound of the snap ring passing over its proper spot and onto the second hole. Anyway works well, good trick. I like saving money!
Do it in a vise...you hear the click. I tried it by hand 6-7 times...then put it in a vise so you can control the speed..worked the first time
Not everyone will have wise
Very informative. I would have never figured out the clicks and tension release.
I agree certain parts can be re used. In the case of of all the work involved in replacing a timing chain, I would install a new one.
Great tip, and explanation, Thank you sir, good job!
You may be saving me a lot of time with this. Thank you!
Thank you very much. Your video was very helpful and saved us a lot of work time!
thank you, greeting from kenya
you just saved me £150 thank you so much i got it in 3 goes :) Amazing
You welcome Jason
Just so glad that I could be of assistance
Thanks for the video! Once you return it back to its original position, do you just install it? How does one ensure the tensioner is properly installed? I screwed my tensioner back into its bracket but don’t know if there is anything else that should be done. Have searched everywhere for proper installation instructions but no luck
hi
All you have to do is tighten the tension and once that is tight then you need to turn the engine anti clockwise approximately 90 degrees at the crankshaft pulley bolt to activate the tension.
If you listen carefully you will hear the tension plunger move forward.
The plunger part must move forward and touch the tensioner rail so that there is always tension on the rail pushing the chain.
This is the most important part because most people do not check if the actual plunger came out.
You can read comments of mine to other people that will probably help as well.
thank you sir , I certainly benefited from this.
Hello does it effect the timing if you take it of and reset it or putting a new one in ?
thank you
Thanks for the video worked for my R350
will this help on puting again the chain with correct tension to stop earing the chain noise in cold start ?
Good tip! Thank you for saving my money.
Wish you were in Central Florida.
Thank you so much.really appreciate this
Ecellent video. Thank you so much .
Thank you John
If you planning doing a timing chain replacement then I would advise you to read my reply to Sergey Kravtsov.
It would make your task much easier.
Good luck
@@iqbalaniff1650 Hi Iqbal,
I have read your reply to Sergey , and have taken note of your advice.
My engine is a W201 1987, I replaced the chain tensioner today, and discovered that it of a different design to the one in your video.
It is simpler to set it back to zero position.
I have the engine stripped down, although it is still in the car.
The cylinder head is removed, and the pistons out of the block.
Tomorrow I am going to feed new timing chain through the guides.
I need one for a 2008 E320 Bluetech diesel. Any suggestions for a good parts place appreciated
Grate information thanks
Great video! Very well explained.
Way to go man excellent video
Thanks man 👍
thank you for the tip, it was very useful! 👍
if a timing chain already stretched a reset or a new tensioner helps at all?
No it will not
It is best you change the timing chain,tensioner,guides and gears all together also an oil change with filter is essential.
From my experience I have discovered that 5W40 fully synthetic engine oil works best on these engines.
Hope this helps
thanks for the reply. So reuse a reset tensioner makes no sense then, cause it was already fully extended and the chain still loose
It always best to replace all the timing chain components when doing a vehicle with high mileage however if you want to save money and do a repair on a budget then inspect and replace just the parts that needs replacing but the timing chain must always be replaced.
Thanks for the video - how do you access the tensioner on the W168 - just remove the airbox or is there more to remove? Any precautions, or simply remove and refit?
It Is easier wich a bench vise because can be done slowly.
Thanks For the tip!!
Yes sure ! I did benefit from the video thanks keep it up
Thank you for making this, great tip!
Great video!
what about the m271 engine, it looks like a different tensioner, how to reset it?
Great instructions!
Thank you for the demonstration
Hello, when do you install this tensioner, after the chain is in place and marks are matching ? Thanks
Hi Sergey
That is correct and an important step is to release the tensioner - you must turn the engine 90 degrees anti clockwise and then back to TDC (if you listen carefully you will hear the tensioner release thereafter turn the engine 3 full turns clockwise and make sure your timing marks are aligned.
Just a word of caution please do not take the O/T (TDC )mark on the crank pulley to be correct.
I have had issues with the damper pulley moving on the rubber mounting.
Remove the number one spark plug and put a long screwdriver and double check if the crank pulley damper is correct.
Good luck.
Do you know the measure of the head, what kind of tool I have to use to take off? Thanks
I use a 19 mm hexagon socket with an extension and a power bar.
@@iqbalaniff1650 thanks for your answer, what about crankshaft screw head? Thanks
@@JaimeRivera-q4s
The crankshaft pulley bolt is 27 mm socket.
We use the metric system.
It worked perfectly for me
I did just once. it worked. I did just one minute.
Thanx a lot !!!
Thanks for video
God bless you!
Wonder how many have been charged for a new one.👍👍👍
Good video...thank you.
Thanks 2024 and this works
Good video and smart man, but honestly don’t risk it and just buy a new one. I reused my tensioner and a year later caused major engine issue because apparently it was never deployed/released. It was jammed.
yep, when you save the labor cost, dont get cheap on parts
Hi sir
The reason you had that problem is you did not release the tensioner.
@@iqbalaniff1650 how do you release the tensioner when its in?
@@johnnyjones2899
Hi Johnny please read my reply to Sergey
Regards
I found if you move the ring back farther than you had it, and then push in, it locks in place on the first try.
I am just pleased that people know the procedure and not spend money on purchasing a new tensioner.
The rest is up to them how they go about doing it and their level of mechanical experience.
Regards
great video thx
If you use a vice you can do it the first time.
Sorry my friend couldn't quite hear what you were trying to explain, as far as I could make out you were finding it very difficult to release the cir clip?.??
thank you very much
Thanks!
Can any one tell me why it is nessesary to have that locking feature in the tensioner. if it is constantly pushing out (towards the chain) why woudl there be any reason to lock it from going back?
Let's begin with a newly installed chain & tensioner. The tensioner is used to put tension on the chain to prevent skipping as the chain [ and engine ] accelerates and de-accelerate as you drive. With use and wear the chain gets longer, you want the tensioner to snap out [ longer ] to take up the slack, Also on starting and heavy acceleration or de-acceleration you don't want the forces to retract the tensioner. .
When the car is accelerating the crankshaft below, is pulling and tugging on the camshaft above, to operate the valves. when you take your foot of the gas, the Crankshaft slows down first pulling and tugging on the opposite side of the chain where the tensioner is located.[ it's like riding a bike with a fixed gear sprocket ] Without the locking mechanism, the tensioner would collapse [ get shorter ] and the chain can skip.
Thank you
excellent!
Lekker man
Thanks
thanks!!
Uncle use a wise to press it gently
always when you change the chain you put on a new tensioner. This is drusety not repair and no mechanics are used in workshops unless someone alone but do you spend a lot of 30 euros on the tensioner
Very poorly design part from a premium auto maker !
NO...it's perfectly designed...one time use so you will have to buy another $130 tensioner...and you can't complain if you put a used tensioner in and it fails
Thank you very much
Thank you so much
Thanks a lot