oldschoolcraft
Well-known member
In my car, I've always just used a combination wrench, box end side, to release tension. on the serpentine belt. I pull it around 30 degrees and that maxes it out, and then I hold my hand in that new position, which is a few inches from the starting position.
I've noticed that there's a lot of these serpentine belt tools and they have ratcheting function. I've also read someone comment about using a ratcheting wrench of the correct size (not part of the kit, just a regular ratcheting wrench) for serpentine belts.
Maybe a dumb question because maybe on my car it's easier than others, but I dont see how ratcheting would help me. I guess it means instead of shifting my hand position by 3 inches as I'm pulling tension, I can ratchet backwards and keep my hand exactly where I started.
Maybe it makes a bigger difference in some cars more than others? What is the benefit of this feature?
I've noticed that there's a lot of these serpentine belt tools and they have ratcheting function. I've also read someone comment about using a ratcheting wrench of the correct size (not part of the kit, just a regular ratcheting wrench) for serpentine belts.
Maybe a dumb question because maybe on my car it's easier than others, but I dont see how ratcheting would help me. I guess it means instead of shifting my hand position by 3 inches as I'm pulling tension, I can ratchet backwards and keep my hand exactly where I started.
Maybe it makes a bigger difference in some cars more than others? What is the benefit of this feature?
