Joe,
Rather than Quanta having two belt lengths for the same application, my guess is that their belts have an average length equal to some manufacturing spec, but there is a distribution of length around that mean value due to some manufacturing issue or allowed tolerance. With the crank to water pump captive belt Quanta may examine each belt they receive from their supplier and then sort them into either a short bin or a long bin. And within each bin, there is still a distribution of lengths about a short and a long mean value. Obviously, I don’t know this for certain.
But here’s a similar example. The alternator belt for my ‘66 L79 no-option car is GM #3861946. The corresponding Quanta belt is 29-B-061. I bought a Quanta 29-B-061 for my car and I was able to install it, but the alternator brace adjusting bolt was at the extreme end of the adjust slot, toward the engine side. So, it was functional, but in my opinion too short and not typical of original GM belts. After talking with another person who had the same issue I called Quanta and told them of my problem and they looked thru their inventory of 29-B-061 belts and they found a longer one, which I bought. All of the markings on the two Quanta belts were identical, so they were the same Quanta part. But they were clearly different lengths. The longer belt they sent me allows me to have the alternator adjusting bolt at least 3” closer to the center of the adjusting slot. For the alternator belt, Quanta could also separate the same belt into two bins and sell a short version and long version. But for whatever reason they don’t do that for the alternator belt, whereas that might be what they do for the captive crank/water pump belt. Just speculating.
Gary
Rather than Quanta having two belt lengths for the same application, my guess is that their belts have an average length equal to some manufacturing spec, but there is a distribution of length around that mean value due to some manufacturing issue or allowed tolerance. With the crank to water pump captive belt Quanta may examine each belt they receive from their supplier and then sort them into either a short bin or a long bin. And within each bin, there is still a distribution of lengths about a short and a long mean value. Obviously, I don’t know this for certain.
But here’s a similar example. The alternator belt for my ‘66 L79 no-option car is GM #3861946. The corresponding Quanta belt is 29-B-061. I bought a Quanta 29-B-061 for my car and I was able to install it, but the alternator brace adjusting bolt was at the extreme end of the adjust slot, toward the engine side. So, it was functional, but in my opinion too short and not typical of original GM belts. After talking with another person who had the same issue I called Quanta and told them of my problem and they looked thru their inventory of 29-B-061 belts and they found a longer one, which I bought. All of the markings on the two Quanta belts were identical, so they were the same Quanta part. But they were clearly different lengths. The longer belt they sent me allows me to have the alternator adjusting bolt at least 3” closer to the center of the adjusting slot. For the alternator belt, Quanta could also separate the same belt into two bins and sell a short version and long version. But for whatever reason they don’t do that for the alternator belt, whereas that might be what they do for the captive crank/water pump belt. Just speculating.
Gary
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