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Actually, It didnt even start until recently when It got a little colder around here, before that it was relatively quiet for a 11 year old engine. I like to try to figure these things out myself without having to go to a garage, but at the same time I hate throwing money at things unless I know exactly where its coming from.I have a similar noise on mine, but it seems to only happen when its cold, I still haven't figured it out to this day since I never thought much of it til the winter comes and I park after driving for a while. Does yours happen when cold or is it constant all the time?
Seems to get closer after second 8 in the video but I might be crazy
Belt spray stuff is a joke, and will only temporarily fix it. Stethoscope made for the auto world is a good tool, but if its coming from a pulley or a tensioner its going to be hard to get good placement to find the source. As loud as the noise is, its going to be VERY loud in a stethoscope too. The sound is clearly rotational, I would suspect a tensioner before anything. It might be easier to put a ratchet with an extension and a socket on your tensioner nut (where you put a ratchet to release the tensioner itself to remove/replace the belt), and I would try adding or relieving the pressure slightly to see if it goes away.
Obviously you are going to need to be very careful, since you are going to need to do this with the engine running. You'll lose a finger in the blink of an eye, so if you don't feel comfortable it might be worth taking somewhere.
I bet with a mechanic's stethoscope ($4 at Harbor Freight), you'd pinpoint the source in less than two minutes.
Yes, the tensioner can certainly be affected by temperature.I'll give that a try with the tensioner seems pretty straightforward, however the sound does not seem to start until the engine gets warm before that it sounds normal. Would the tensioner be affected by cold morning weather as this just recently started happening as the temps started to drop around here?
Still a valid method, and widely used.+2 ^^^
Before these were invented, we took a long extension and stuck one end in our ear and touched the other end to suspected parts. You're thinking about this too much.
tried the belt dressing stuff as I had to run to the store anyway and they had it, did not help in fact on top of the sound I got a bunch of squealing for about 5 miles. gonna run to harbour freight and grab one of the stethoscopes as I couldn't pin point it using a screwdriver, Water Pump was replaced 8/2016 Id hate to have to replace it again so soon.
Sorry for the belt dressing not working, but the fact that the squealing got ugly and continued for 5 miles may be the effect of your tensioner not applying enough belt tension to drive the alternator load. i swear this should be a simple fix.