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Parts for your 2001 Toyota Caldina-Drive belt pulley

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2001 Toyota Caldina Drive-Belt Pulley — What It Does and When To Service It

Yes, the 2001 Toyota Caldina uses drive-belt pulleys. Toyota’s Electronic Parts Catalogue (EPC) for the ST210/ST215 series and engine service manuals for the 7A‑FE, 3S‑FE/GE and 3S‑GTE engines all show a V‑ribbed (serpentine or multi‑belt) accessory drive with a crankshaft pulley (harmonic balancer) plus alternator, power steering and A/C compressor pulleys, and associated idler/tensioner pulleys. These technical sources confirm the part is fitted and serviceable on this model.

On a 2001 Caldina, the drive-belt pulley system transfers crankshaft power to key accessories so you’ve got a charging alternator, smooth power steering assist and cold A/C. The crank pulley also doubles as a harmonic balancer, damping torsional vibration to protect the engine and keep the belt tracking straight. When pulleys or their bearings wear, the belt can squeal, drift or shred, and accessories can underperform.

As part of routine servicing, a technician will visually check the belt and pulleys every 10,000–20,000 km or at each service, and typically replace the belt around 60,000–100,000 km depending on condition and climate. For the Caldina’s S‑series and A‑series engines, the following care points are worthwhile:

  • Listen for cold-start squeal, chirps at idle or a rhythmic “ticking” that rises with engine speed — common signs of a glazed belt or rough pulley bearing.
  • With the belt off, spin and rock each idler/tensioner pulley. Any roughness, play, noise or staining near the bearing means replacement time.
  • Inspect the crank pulley’s rubber isolator ring (harmonic balancer). Cracks, separation or wobble are red flags — replace immediately to avoid belt loss.
  • Check belt alignment and tensioner movement. A jittery or weak tensioner will chew belts