Many would have seen another way to change the belt : To cut the existing in half : put on the new and then cut away the rest of the old job done.
This used to work on the older 8v engines, but cannot work on the 16v / 24v V6, due to the lips on the pulleys.
I know quite a few EXPERIANCED people who I would trust implicitly to change a belt without a kit
That's your choice, but, no amount of experience, and no good an "eye" will get the crank dead on TDC, hence you will never be sure the cams are correctly aligned.
Getting the marks on the pulleys in line with the cutouts on the covers on the V6 is NOT accurate. No amount of experience will be any match for precision-engineered tools when timing up the V6.
There is no micro adjustment on the meega.
Must disagree. Once the belt is installed, the banks of cams can be rotated through extremely small fractions, (using the adjustable idlers), to get the valve timing spot on. This is the micro adjustment.
James was it not the laser kit you used to use
I bought one, but once I realised how awful it was, I never ever used it to time up a car. I ended up returning it, and buying a SP kit, which is much better.
Who is to say that is wrong if it works
Just becaue it works, doesn't mean it's done properly, or was a good job. When I checked the timing on my own V6, the tensioner was set way off, and the cams were a few degrees out. This "worked".. in the sense that it could be driven etc.. but it was still definately wrong!
I know quite a few EXPERIANCED people who I would trust implicitly to change a belt without a kit.
I also know some extremely experienced people, including a handful of members here - but I still wouldn't let them fit my cambelt without a kit!
for as many problems that exist there will be as many solutions. Thats what makes us all diffrent.
Agreed - although my personal solution would be to buy a timing kit

We will have to agree to disagree, because I 100% maintain that you will not get one of these engines right without a timing kit.