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Parts for your 2010 Holden Captiva 7-Drive belt

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2010 Holden Captiva 7 Drive Belt — What It Does and When to Replace It

For the 2010 Holden Captiva 7, a drive belt is absolutely relevant and fitted. Technical references such as the Holden Captiva CG Series I Workshop Manual (Engine Mechanical – Drive/Serpentine Belt procedures), the GM/ACDelco parts catalogue, and the Gates Australia application guide all list an accessory (serpentine) drive belt and automatic tensioner for the 3.2L V6 petrol (LY7) and the 2.0L diesel (VCDi) engines. That confirms every 2010 Captiva 7 runs a belt up front under the bonnet to spin essential accessories.

On this model, the drive belt loops around pulleys to run the alternator, power steering pump, air‑conditioning compressor, and water pump (varies by engine). It’s a single, ribbed, heavy‑duty belt designed to be quiet and efficient, kept tight by a spring‑loaded tensioner. If the belt slips, cracks, or snaps, you can lose charging, steering assist, cabin cooling, and engine cooling pretty quickly—so it’s not a part to ignore.

Service-wise, a good workshop will inspect the Captiva’s drive belt at every routine service, looking and listening for trouble. While many belts last 90,000–120,000 km or more, heat, dust, and urban stop‑start can shorten life. The workshop manual and major belt makers recommend condition-based replacement: if it’s noisy, worn, or contaminated, change it rather than push your luck.

  • Tell‑tale signs it’s time: chirping/squealing on start-up, glazing or cracking across the ribs, frayed edges, rubber dust near pulleys, or flickering charge lights.
  • Don’t forget the hardware: tensioners and idlers wear too. If the belt’s coming off, assess and often replace the tensioner and any rough or wobbly idler pulleys at the same time.
  • Diesel note: the 2.0 VCDi also has a separate timing belt for the cams. That’s a different item and interval. The accessory drive belt discussed here is external and inspected/replaced on condition.

For a 2010 Captiva 7, a tidy approach is to schedule a belt and tensioner check at each service, keep an eye on it from about 80,000 km, and replace promptly if there’s visible wear or noise. Using quality OEM‑equivalent belts and correct routing/tension (as outlined in the Holden CG Series I service procedures) keeps the alternator charging, the steering light, and the A/C blowing cold—no dramas.

Popular questions about 2010 Holden Captiva 7 drive belts

How often should the drive belt be replaced on a 2010 Captiva 7?
There isn’t a strict fixed kilometre figure for the accessory belt