No.
On engines with a timing belt, it is inside the passenger side of the engine.
2.4L has a belt, all other engines are a chain2.4L has a belt, all other engines are a chain
belt
Pushrod engines have a chain. Overhead cam engines have a belt.
In many cars YES, but not all cars.The engines will be "Interference Engines" or "Noninterference engines"When the belt breaks in interference engines the valves strike the pistons and bend.
If wearing the seat belt properly, then no a passenger should not hit the windshield.If wearing the seat belt properly, then no a passenger should not hit the windshield.
it's a chain, not a belt
On some engines, yes.
It has a timing belt, not a chain. The belt is located under the plastic covers on the passenger side of the engine.It has a timing belt, not a chain. The belt is located under the plastic covers on the passenger side of the engine.
It has a belt. The general rule for Nissans is 4 cylinder engines have a timing chain, and 6 cylinder engines have a timing belt. The 2002 Frontier follows this rule. Also note that most Nissan engines are "interference" engines, so follow timing belt service reccomendations.
That depends on the engine and year. On pre-2003 Honda Accords all engines used a cam belt. On 2003-up the 4 cylinder engines use a cam chain, no maintenance required. On 2003-up V6 it uses a cam belt that must be replaced at 105,000 miles. All engines with a cam belt are interference engines and if the belt breaks serious engine damage will occur. On pre-1990 engines replace the belt at 60,000 miles. On 1990-96 engines replace it at 90,000 miles. On 1997-up replace at 105,000 miles.
The 2.7L has a timing chain. All other engines have a timing belt.The 2.7L has a timing chain. All other engines have a timing belt.