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Parts for your 2007 Nissan Serena-Drive belt

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2007 Nissan Serena Drive Belt: What it does and how to look after it

Technical references including the Nissan Serena C25 Factory Service Manual (Engine and Maintenance sections), the Nissan FAST parts catalogue, and industry belt catalogues from Gates and Dayco confirm the 2007 Nissan Serena (C25) is fitted with a single serpentine accessory drive belt. So yes, a drive-belt is absolutely relevant on this model.

On a 2007 Serena, the drive-belt wraps around the crank pulley to run the alternator and air-conditioning compressor, and—on variants with hydraulic power steering—the power-steering pump as well. On the common MR20DE petrol engine, the water pump is internal and driven by the timing chain, not the accessory belt, which is handy to know when diagnosing overheating versus charging or steering issues.

The belt’s job is dead simple but critical: keep the battery charging, the cabin cool, and the steering assist working where applicable. If it slips or fails, drivers can experience a flat battery, squeals, poor A/C performance, and heavy steering. While engine overheating is less likely on the MR20DE because the water pump isn’t belt-driven, a failed belt can still leave the vehicle stranded.

  • Common signs of wear: squealing on cold starts, glazing or cracks on the ribs, frayed edges, or a chirp that rises with engine speed.
  • Don’t ignore pulley issues: a noisy idler or a weak tensioner will chew up a new belt quickly.

For Australia and New Zealand conditions, a good rule of thumb is to visually inspect the belt every 10,000–15,000 km or 12 months and replace it around 80,000–100,000 km or 5–6 years, sooner if there’s noise or visible damage. EPDM belts can look fine yet be worn, so go by noise, rib wear, and tensioner condition—not just cracks.

Replacement is straightforward for a competent home mechanic: note the routing diagram under the bonnet, use a spanner on the automatic tensioner to unload the belt, slip it off, then route the new belt and ensure every rib is seated before releasing the tensioner. Avoid belt dressings