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Old 07-10-2003, 10:21 PM   #1
Dads72
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Engine gurus

Idle is fine.
Rev it up in park and it shreeks - like a bad bearing someplace.
Think it is either the water pump, the fan clutch, or the alternator.
Before I start throwing parts at it, is there a way to isolate the source of the problem?
If it helps, it only seems to do this when I rev up the engine and then back off of the throttle.
I get the bad sound when I back off.
Thanks
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Old 07-10-2003, 10:24 PM   #2
70c10
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Check the tension on your belts. BTW- I'm definitely not an engine guru!,lol
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Old 07-10-2003, 10:28 PM   #3
Dads72
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Check for too loose, or too tight?
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Old 07-10-2003, 10:46 PM   #4
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Make sure they have pretty good tension on them. whenever I tighten them, I make it so you can grab the belt in the middle of the two pulleys and move it back and forth about an inch with just a little bit of effort. The squealing is usually the belt slipping and if thats the case it just needs a little bit of tightening.
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Old 07-10-2003, 11:01 PM   #5
70shortnphat
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If playing with belt tension does'nt help then start removing belts one at a time running the engine in between and try to make the noise. If you remove a belt and the the noise stops you can narrow down your search or isolate the problem.
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Old 07-11-2003, 04:49 PM   #6
GasHog396
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As you loosen and check each belt, also turn the associated accessory(ies) by hand to make sure they spin freely. I had a similar problem with my p/u and it turned out to be the water pump on my 396 actually starting to seize up. The revs at idle weren't sufficient to cause the belt to slip, but just touch the gas and it sounded like someone was trying to give a cat a bath under there, only louder. I could hardly turn the thing over by hand and the pump never leaked a bit of coolant. Also check the condition of the belts. Slipping will leave a slick glossy look on the belt(s) as will age. Time to replace them if that happens.
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Old 07-11-2003, 04:59 PM   #7
tom hand
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You can use WD-40 to isolate belt sweaks...just try it on one belt at a time till you find the culprit. Then tighten/replace as necessary.
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Old 07-11-2003, 08:45 PM   #8
jon engel
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An old trick is take a long screw driver and hold the end on the part that you want to check,hold the handle with your thumb over the end then put your ear on your thumb and listen for grinding or squealing sound. This method works in most every case. You can also do this to find the side of your engine has noisy lifters and if you have bearing problems
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Old 07-11-2003, 08:56 PM   #9
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Getting the squeal on decell, indicates belt problems. You've already heard...look for aged (cracked or glazed) belts, and replace, or loose tension. I would personally change out a belt that was loose enough to squeal, as it will have gazed from slipping anyway. One last tip...run some emery cloth on the pulley groove too, to break the glaze on it from slipping. Gives a new belt a better chance to "seat" in.
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