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Parts for your 2005 Toyota Wish-Drive belt pulley

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2005 Toyota Wish drive-belt-pulley: purpose, care and when to replace

Yes, a drive-belt pulley is absolutely relevant and used on the 2005 Toyota Wish. Toyota’s Electronic Parts Catalog for the ZNE10G/ANE10G Wish (1ZZ-FE 1.8L and 1AZ-FSE 2.0L engines) lists a V‑ribbed accessory drive belt along with the crankshaft pulley (harmonic balancer), an automatic belt tensioner, and idler/auxiliary pulleys. Toyota engine repair manuals for the 1ZZ-FE and 1AZ series also include routine inspection of the drive belt and pulleys. That means this part is fitted and serviceable on this model.

On a 2005 Toyota Wish, the drive-belt pulleys transfer crankshaft power to the alternator and A/C compressor, and—where fitted—a hydraulic power steering pump. The crank pulley (often a harmonic balancer) drives the V‑ribbed belt, while the tensioner and idler pulleys keep the belt tracking straight and at the right tension. When the pulleys are healthy, the belt runs quiet and accessories charge, cool and assist steering with no dramas.

During routine servicing, it’s smart to check the pulleys any time the belt is inspected. Spin each accessible pulley by hand with the engine off and under the bonnet: they should feel smooth, with no grinding, wobble or notchiness. Look for belt tracking marks, shine (glazing) or rubber dust around a pulley face—these hint at bearing wear or misalignment. If the Wish has a cold-start squeal or chirp that changes with revs, a glazed belt or a tired tensioner pulley is often the culprit.

As a rule of thumb in Aussie and Kiwi conditions, inspect the belt and pulleys every 20,000–30,000 kilometres or 12 months, and replace the belt around 80,000–100,000 kilometres or six years. Pulleys and the automatic tensioner are replaced on condition—any roughness, play, noise, or visible damage means it’s time. Always match the belt length and rib count to the specific engine and A/C/steering setup, and use quality OEM‑equivalent pulleys. When fitting parts, follow the factory routing diagram, relieve the tensioner correctly, and torque fasteners to Toyota specifications.

After replacement, start the engine and watch the belt track—no wobble, no edge fray. Recheck tensioner movement and listen for noise. A quick revisit after a few hundred kilometres to re-inspect is a good shout. Done right, the Wish’s accessory drive will stay quiet, charge properly and keep the cabin cool on long summer runs.

  • Signs you need pulley attention: belt squeal, chirp or rumble