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Parts for your 1986 Suzuki Swift-Drive belt
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1986 Suzuki Swift Drive-Belt: What It Does and How to Look After It
Technical references including the Suzuki Swift factory workshop manual for the SA/AA series (1983–1988) and Australian application catalogues from Gates and Dayco confirm the 1986 Suzuki Swift uses accessory drive-belts (individual V-belts rather than a single modern serpentine belt). These belts run the alternator and, where fitted, the air-conditioning compressor and power steering pump. On many engines of this era, the water pump is driven by the timing belt, not the accessory belt, but the accessory drive-belts are still essential for charging and ancillaries.
For a tidy little hatch like the ’86 Swift, the drive-belt is a quiet achiever. Its job is to transfer crankshaft power to bolt-on gear—keeping the alternator charging and, if equipped, the A/C cold and the steering light. If that belt slips, stretches, or cracks, you can end up with a flat battery, squeals under the bonnet, or accessories that pack up right when they’re needed most.
Servicing the drive-belt on a 1986 Swift is straightforward because it typically uses separate V-belts with manual tension adjustment. A quick check during routine servicing pays off big time. Look for fraying, glazing (a shiny, hardened surface), missing ribs on multi-rib types, and any fine cracking. A light squeal on start-up or when switching on the A/C is another telltale sign the belt’s loose or worn.
As a rule of thumb, inspect at every service and replace at the first signs of wear, or every few years if the car doesn’t see many kilometres. Belts age from heat and time, not just distance. Tension matters: too loose and it slips