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Parts for your 2005 Toyota Vitz|yaris-Drive belt
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2005 Toyota Vitz/Yaris Drive-Belt: What It Does and When to Replace It
Technical sources including the Toyota repair manual for the XP90 Yaris/Vitz platform (2005–2010) and common workshop references such as the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue and Haynes Yaris manuals confirm that the 2005 Toyota Vitz/Yaris uses an accessory drive-belt (often called a serpentine or V‑ribbed belt). The petrol engines typically found in this model (e.g., 1NZ‑FE 1.5L and 2SZ‑FE 1.3L) use a timing chain for valve timing, but still rely on a separate accessory drive-belt to run components like the alternator, water pump and air‑conditioning compressor. Many variants use electric power steering, so there’s usually no power‑steering belt to worry about.
Under the bonnet, that V‑ribbed belt is the workhorse that keeps charging, cooling and cabin comfort humming along. If it’s slipping, cracked or contaminated, you can cop battery warning lights, squeals on start‑up, poor A/C performance or even rising engine temperatures because the water pump isn’t being driven properly.
For everyday servicing in Australia and New Zealand, it’s smart to have the belt inspected at each routine service interval (about every 10,000–15,000 km or 6–12 months, depending on your schedule). Most workshops replace on condition, but many owners see best results swapping the belt somewhere around 90,000–120,000 km if signs of wear show up earlier. Always follow the specific guidance in the factory service information for your engine code and market spec.
- What to look for: cracking between ribs, glazing/shiny patches, frayed edges, missing chunks, or a belt that sits low in the pulley grooves.
- What you might hear: chirps or squeals on cold starts, or a squeak when accessories load up (A/C on, lights, demister).
- Fitment tips: route the belt exactly as per the diagram in the engine bay or manual, ensure all ribs sit cleanly in pulley grooves, and set tension correctly (spring tensioner or adjustment lock—varies by engine). A dab of water can help diagnose slip