It should be on a sticker on the radiator fan shroud. If it's worn away, look at a friends, or in the junk yard.
There is a routing diagram under the hood on a placard. If you don't have this card you can go to any Autozone and they should be able to print one for you
What do you want the "diagram" to show you? Mechanical assembly? Hydraulic fluid circuit? Serpentine belt routing? Be specific and include the vehicle year. Sorry, I cant be more helpful without more info.
belt diagram for ford 4.9 without ac.
Yes, I need a diagram of the serpentine belt for a 1997 3.8 liter Bonneville SE without a turbo charger.
Might have better luck in a Chevy forum. http://experts.about.com/q/Chevrolet-Repair-808/indexExp_33416.htm
I just bought a belt for my 4.0L and there was a diagram on the outer wrapper of the belt (listed common belt diagrams). You might call the auto parts store and ask them to look to see if the diagram comes with the belt. If it matters my belt was from Advance Auto Parts and was the better one (1 YR warranty instead of 90 days). I forgot the brand.
If your local auto parts store has a listing for the belt without air conditioning, then yes it is. They should also be able to provide you with a diagram of the new routing.
If that model was available without a/c, you will need to purchase the belt for a 95 town car w/out ac, and follow the appropriate belt routing diagram for that model.
under the hood.
yes they were made with no air if you cant find a belt routing find one for a wrangler with no air it is probably the same i think it has been a while ask at your local parts store for a diagram
There is an idler/tensioning pulley that keeps the belt tight. You must release the tension on it (usually they have a nut on the shaft that can be used for leverage to release the tension). Then remove the belt paying careful attention to how it is routed. There also should be a sticker under the hood that shows the belt routing. Usually it shows the routing with different options- cars with A/C have a compressor that ones without do not have. Just follow the routing diagram to install replacement belt.
There should be a place on the tensioner to insert a ratchet wrench or breaker bar without a socket or a "nut" for a socket to fit. Turn the tensioner clockwise or counterclockwise to loosen the tension (some tensioners rotate clockwise and some counterclockwise) and remove the old serpentine belt - NOTE: be sure and note how the belt is routed so you can install the new one in the same routing.