Man----stop right where you are and time the whole thing again.
I know what you did and it isnt good. It very easy to do, and you dont even know you did it. Im going off what you stated....
I've found that this is a pretty important step You need to pull up on the t-belt tensioner pully pretty hard when you have the flats tools in. Get a mirror and look under the pulley, you'll see the socket that the tensioner actuator is supposed to fit into. This does not line up correctly untill you pull the tensioner up. I had a friend with a 1/2 drive and something like a 1/2 in socket on the tension pulling it up. Not HARD but firm. Then with a mirror, make sure you are lined up. You'll see what I mean. The shaft of the actuator comes out into a perfect spot on the tensioner flange. If you dont do this, I may still look like its lined up, but it isnt and like you said it isnt that tight. What may be happening and the some of the ticking you are hearing, is that the actuator is actually resting on the tensioner PULLEY itself. Grinding and flapping around.
Sooooo...I've got to say that I'm part of this BTDT club
Also, the cross threadding is, well, could be bad or repairable. If you want to try and repair it, the elcheapo, and I strees elcheapo, way of fixing it is to clean the thread you good with steel wool, spray it down with carb cleaner and use JB weld or Loctite (not too much) and put the bolt back in. Make sure you let it dry before you put any stress on the bolt.
You should re-thread with a tap if you can.
I know what you did and it isnt good. It very easy to do, and you dont even know you did it. Im going off what you stated....
When I pulled the pin on the tensioning device, the belt is still lose and flappy around the top idler pulley where the belt has to come up to the intake cams. When I cranked the car up and idle you can see the belt jittering right there. It doesn't jump off anything but it doesn't look like something that would last 60k miles. This is the longest span the belt makes but it just seems like it didn't tighten up right
Sooooo...I've got to say that I'm part of this BTDT club
Also, the cross threadding is, well, could be bad or repairable. If you want to try and repair it, the elcheapo, and I strees elcheapo, way of fixing it is to clean the thread you good with steel wool, spray it down with carb cleaner and use JB weld or Loctite (not too much) and put the bolt back in. Make sure you let it dry before you put any stress on the bolt.
You should re-thread with a tap if you can.
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