Andy, excellent video and fantastic summary of the challenges the VR6 owners face. Having owned my 3.2 since 2009 with only 8,000 miles I wish I had found the report and this information many years ago! I would have switched to annual servicing rather than the Audi recommended 2 years Longlife interval to keep my 3.2 engine in tip-top condition.
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Massive thank you David for finding the report, suggesting and trusting me with converting it to a video! I hope I did it justice!
@johnh3710 Жыл бұрын
Excellent and comprehensive video, Andy. When I was selling my mk5 R32, the eventual buyer did try to knock some money off of my asking price by saying they could hear 'marbling' from the engine, indicating a "nackered timing chain". This is when the car was on around 52k miles. I did however call their bluff by showing them the group readings from VCDS which were exemplary! God, I wish I'd kept that car...
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your comment John and yes, the marbling can be a bit of a sign of the chain or tensioner wear. Readings at least show where the chain truly sits in the stretch scale. Its gutting when you sell a car and then instantly regret it. I have a similar story when chopping in my K reg RS1800i Fiesta for a knackered G reg RS Turbo Escort. All because I did not have the inclination to solve the failed steering rack. Should never have traded it in!
@ENFDO Жыл бұрын
Damn, the vr6 into the Audi TT Mk1 with DGS makes magic. 280 km/h is something not many Audi TT can reach like de mk1 vr6. A litterally jewel.
@christoph53-rc7 Жыл бұрын
Hello Andy, this is Michael from the A3 quattro forum in Germany. Congratulations on the great video. I hope it helps the cars with the great VR6 engine get the right care to run trouble free for a long time
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Thank you Michael and thank you once again for the fantastic report!
@christopherpardell44188 ай бұрын
I have had my 05 3.2 TT DSG Quattro since 2007. So far, it’s been bulletproof. The DSG really helps protect the engine.
@blankname855328 күн бұрын
What does that mean? How does a transmission protect the engine? I loved my 6 speed manual on the VR6.
@christopherpardell441828 күн бұрын
@@blankname8553 The DSG is a six speed like a manual, that is, no torque converter, but it has a dual automatic clutch. Paddle shifters give you almost complete control over shifting, except the DSG takes info from your brake and accelerator use to guess which gear you are gonna want next, so it pre-shifts the idle clutch into the next gear, so that when you do shift the shift is instant. Faster than any manual shift. And with a perfect throttle blip every time for perfect gear sync. It has two auto-shift modes, Drive and Sport, that change how it shifts. In S it will auto shift for you, but delay shifting until right at redline. ( you focus on driving, knowing the DSG will shift exactly at redline for maximal acceleration without over-revving the engine. ) And it will downshift if you slow to keep the engine in the 4k and up powerband. This makes it perform extremely well. In D mode, it shifts as early as the high torque VR6 allows, e.g. it will shift into 6th at 35 mph if you are driving it calmly, and that gets you a 31 mpg fuel economy. SO, How does it protect my engine? The DSG NEVER misses a shift, and every shift is perfectly timed and perfectly meshed. It never forgets to shift into first when I stop. It will not ALLOW me to run the engine over redline, nor will it allow me to lug the engine in too low a gear. And if I drive most of the time in D mode, it keeps the engine revs as low as possible and takes full advantage of the high torque at low rev of that naturally aspirated VR6. In short, the DSG coupled with the VR6 does an excellent job of preventing the driver errors that cause damage and increase wear. To wit: I have used my TT as my daily driver for 19 years. I have 133k miles on the odometer. And have never had the slightest issue with either the engine or the transmission, just scheduled maintenance.
@wolfaja755 Жыл бұрын
The vr6 is one of the best engines vw group has ever made and certainly the best sounding 6 cylinder I’ve ever heard in my opinion.
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Totally agree and thank you for your comment buddy! 👍
@louvendran7273 Жыл бұрын
As a VR6 owner, I change my oil every 4 months as I commit the sin of short trips. I've got 190k kms. Seems to be going okay still. I've used an additive since 150k km. Seems to have quietened the idle a little. Just a bit of info for other owners/drivers from my perspective.
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Great feedback there and advice. That’s a good way to protect the engine!
@louvendran7273 Жыл бұрын
@@andycharger Fantastic video BTW mate. In depth, accurate, attentive and factual. Very hard to find on KZbin. Greetings from Auckland.
@mattricopena10 ай бұрын
I'm at 180k now! Which oil have you been using? The exact oil? Spec? Weight? What was the additive you used? Also, how long after using the additive did you renew the oil? Cheers bud Long live the MK1TT/VR6/R32 community
@wickertwm5 ай бұрын
The timing chain is a problem with most cars that have them. I don't know why the manufacturer doesn't engineer the timing chain, then add a fudge factor to that calculation making the chain slightly more expensive but much more robust. I think the reason is that enthusiast are the only ones that care. Most modern car consumers don't even know there is a motor (they are moire interested in the electronic goodies rather than what makes the car actually go), and rarely check their oil resulting in catastrophic failures. I have a pre-owned Touareg 3.6l and one of the first things I did was have the timing chain checked for stretch (it was good thank god)
@tymakas13 күн бұрын
Very good video! Especially when thinking of buying one!
@andycharger8 күн бұрын
Thank you. I appreciate your kind words on the video!
@davidrolfe9571 Жыл бұрын
I had an A3 Quattro with the VR6 engine in 2007 which was loosing coolant from new. At the first service the Dealership found there was an external split in the block alongside a head stud. Unable to get just a short engine, the Dealer fitted a brand new engine. Disappointing fault but good service.
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Cant fault that service David! Good to hear they sorted it for you.
@VertigoGTI2 ай бұрын
Great video. I’ve never had a 3.2, but have owned a few 2.8s and all of them suffered chain stretch. It makes me wonder why they haven’t reconsidered timing belts instead. Between oiling issues for the tensioners, guide grooving, and timing chain wear, it seems a lot of these issues could be resolved by isolating the timing hardware from the oil. The SACHS logo was an eye opener; I’m surprised they were stamped that deep. A laser etch would solve a lot of that issue.
@andycharger2 ай бұрын
Thanks for your comment. Yes, I too was surprised by the stamped logo issue. It just goes to show the fine tolerance these parts are manufactured to.
@theodorew.skonos9460 Жыл бұрын
Very excellent insight as to how our 3.2 engine operates and what doesn't work for our engines to stay healthy. This is invaluable information for any VR6 Owner. Out of curiosity... did Audi ever acknowledge their miss-information regarding service intervals and the inherent weaknesses of their design ie: Sachs stamp on the timing chain, warming vehicle up to operating temperature for short trips ext... Thank you for the deep dive into our engine and the steps that we can take to keep our engines healthy and our timing chains less prone to failure!
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Hi Theodore. Thanks for your comments and feedback. I dont think they publicly acknowledged it or offered any advice on how to drive it. I believe there were revisions for the Mk2 after a year or so. The Iwis chain replaced the Sachs from the factory I believe also. Im glad the video helps!
@christoph53-rc7 Жыл бұрын
@@andycharger By the time Chris and I were researching and writing the report, the Audi A3 3.2 quattro was no longer in production and no longer of interest to Audi. The engine was written off. Therefore, there was no reason for Audi to pursue the problem. Internal and Public. Only in the run-up to the report did we from the A3 quattro Forum bring the topic to German television. At 2008. There, Audi made the excuse that it had been published to the workshops, but that they had not taken note of it. The TV video is available here: kzbin.info/www/bejne/bnzZda1oiax9rJI
@pigeonguardgames507 Жыл бұрын
Very, very useful video Andy, I will certainly upgrade the oil at next change, i always service the car every year, so pleased I was doing that bit right! Just got to try and stop the short journeys!!!!
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Thanks Si! It sure opens your eyes when you find gems of information like that!
@Jeff-cv4qn7 ай бұрын
Basically buy good oil and change regulary. thank you I`m gonna as soon as I get mine MOT again this year!
@andycharger6 ай бұрын
That is a very wise choice my friend! Regular oil changes are a must on these cars. Thanks for the comment!
@benofthenorthuk Жыл бұрын
Brilliant video Andy. I’m not enjoying the short school run data - that’s 95% what my car gets used for 😂 oh well, that’s life. Thanks for putting it all together 👌🏻
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Thanks Ben! It’s rather frightening when you look at the facts. I looked in the service book ( you can see it in the video) and there is the tick against long life service! Not any more! I might call it “fresh oil Friday” from now on!
@benofthenorthuk Жыл бұрын
@@andycharger mine is flushed yearly with who I get serviced with thankfully - but being that I do short journeys so often, I’ve been expecting mine to need doing at some point in the future anyway. At least that way I won’t be disappointed when it comes! Shame it’s such a painful job to do, but it being once a lifetime job really makes it more bearable
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
@@benofthenorthuk have you checked your chain readings? Might be worth doing for peace of mind.
@benofthenorthuk Жыл бұрын
@@andycharger I had the readings when I bought it, but that was a year ago - I do need to re-read them
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Definitely do them at least yearly. Chris and I did them last december and it was 3 and 3. I just did it myself today (12 months on) ant they are 3 and 5. So not far away from the dreaded replacement!
@peterlowden3814 Жыл бұрын
Great video Andy and information!!! Invaluable for anyone away to buy a 3.2 TT 👌
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Thanks Peter! Hopefully it makes more in the community aware and help adapt driving styles to protect those chains!
@richardturner587 Жыл бұрын
Hi Andy, interesting information...hit the nail on the head on some points, there are many factors involved...no 1 oil and filter a must, I've done mine every 4k to preserve condition of internals. One thing not mentioned, that I would be interested to hear your views on is 'Engine Flushing' , I have done occasionally...mechanics views on this differs somewhat. The other factor I believe is how hard it's been driven !
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Hi Richard. Thanks for the feedback sir! I dont think a flush can do it any harm. I is a bit like a super dose of additives in my opinion. Clears all of that sludge out that we know can contribute to blowby and clogging!
@richardturner587 Жыл бұрын
@@andycharger You think similarly to me...what on earth were Audi thinking back in 2004 with their Service Schedules on these ? One garage told me once . " Don't use Engine Flush regularly because some of it hides in pools around the engine and it dilutes the effectiveness of the fresh oil ! Is that true...I don't know 🤔
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
@@richardturner587 if its hiding in pools, its not doing its job of flushing!
@Piatek123456 Жыл бұрын
Andy, great video mate. Thank you for your time and effort + everyone involved. Any chance you could do deep dive into APX and BAM as well please? Many thanks
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for your support! I think there is a lot more info out there for the BAM and APX and when we chat at meets, there are definitely more knowledgeable heads out there that can provide a better deep dive than me but happy to give it a go!
@hostrider28Ай бұрын
Приает с России. Езжу на Audi A5, купэ, кватро, 3.2. V6 Cala, с коробкой автомат ZF. Очень нравится эта скоростная машина. Не знаю почему, но она едет у меня 280км. в час. О двигателе VR6, тоже наслышан. Я ездил на масле Motul 0w30. На нем мотор звучит и крутится лучше. Проехал 250 тыс. Сейчас поставил в ремонт. Мастер продиагностировал и сказал, что нужно поменять лямбдо зонды, и поменять один клапан в головке, так как машина стала проваливаться в ограничение оборотов 4 тыс. Еще стали течь прокладки и их тоже в замену. Но моя вина тоже есть, так как я часто гонял на ней на высоких скоростях и последний раз на скорости 200 зацепился с БМВ M5F90. Гонка вышла спонтанно и я не сразу понял, что это M. К моему большому удивлению в аэродинамическом мешке на 280 я догнал BMW. Какое там ограничение у меня в скорости, я так ни разу и не на щупал. Становится страшно давить дальше😂 С маслами и запчастями у нас сейчас конечно стало очень дорого, из-за всем известных проблем. Если кому известно, почему у меня нет ограничений в скорости, напишите. По этим моторам у нас не много информации. Как едит моя машина, у меня можно посмотреть зайдя по ссылке моего ника.
@jankarlsson11819 күн бұрын
according to the Bentley book for Audi TT 2000-2006 (official Audi TT Service manual) the correct motor oil is 5W-40 all synthetic oil for filling the VW 502 00 and 505 00 specifications, not 0W-30 oil!!!!
@andycharger19 күн бұрын
This was the findings of the independent report AFTER all the engines were failing with the Audi recommended long life oil. So you follow whichever guidance you wish. This video is detailing that report.
@RKK369 Жыл бұрын
Great video Andy 👍🏿 Very informative. I'm seriously considering upgrading to a VR6 so I'm up to speed ... Cheers
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for your kind words! The VR6 is an amazing car!
@GenderIsBinary809 ай бұрын
I'm in the US and bought a 2006 Audi A3 Quattro with the same engine; engine code BUB. Per the owner's manual, the car oil was to be changed every 10,000 miles (approx. 16,000 km). If I recall correctly, on my third or forth trip to dealer for service, there were little signs/notices on the tables in the waiting area say basically, "we realize and acknowledge your manual says change oil every 10,000 miles, and while this is okay for warranty claims (should the need arise), we now recommend changing your oil every 5,000 miles." Perhaps that was do address issues discussed in this video. Perhaps I was lucky, but I was able to get 206,000 miles (approx. 332,000 km) out of my engine with no timing chain codes, noises, and of course, changes. I must admit I did do a lot of highway/interstate driving, which certainly had and effect. Loved my VR6. So of course I had to get another car with one, only this time it's the 2018 VW Passat GT (which has the 3.6 variant and other than the obvious difference in displacement, has quite a few other engineering changes to the engine); hopefully I can get the same mileage, but regular and timely oil changes will be even more important as this version had direct injection (so even more blow-by and fuel dilution).
@nah4got11 ай бұрын
Informative and to the point. Great job mate!
@andycharger11 ай бұрын
Thank you! Much appreciated! 🙏
@eddiericks6554 Жыл бұрын
Mk2 vr6 tt is my favorite so far mk1 was good but the magnetic 🧲 ride and the spoiler that’s motorized is so cool 😎
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the comment Eddie. There are some cool variants of the car out there.
@Scoupe40011 ай бұрын
The mk2 spoiler is a lovely hark back to the corrado days. Shame the mk2 doesn’t sound as good as the mk1 (even with a Tampa mod).
@friscostreetstories5403 Жыл бұрын
I have a mk4 r32 with this motor, they are bulletproof as long as you do preventative maintenance. It's at 198k, tuned cammed etc.and I expect her to reach 300k . I wonder if the BJS was affected. I changed my chains at 160k
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Lets hope they stay bulletproof! Thanks for your comment buddy. I am not sure if the BJS was affected as only those mentioned in the report seems to be a problem.
@mattricopena10 ай бұрын
Only one change in entire life? Mine was changed at 90-110k.. she's at 180k right now.
@rickkoen13 Жыл бұрын
Greetings. Lovely review. I recently got a vw golf mk5 as project car . I'm looking to throw in an R32 engine, my question is Audi TT mk2 3.2 v6 the same engine as the R32? Thanks
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Hi Rick and thanks for your comment sir! I believe the engines are essentially the same blocks but have different codings for their usage. BHE is the code for the TT Mk1 V6 3.2 Engine. BUB on the TT Mk2 V6 3.2 Engine. Codes for the R32 are BJS/BML. Essentially the same engine though.
@rickkoen13 Жыл бұрын
@@andycharger Thanks for the clarification. I appreciate it 🙏
@kingchooet99664 ай бұрын
I change my Golf 5 R32's oil every 10.000km (~6200 miles). However, i see you say that oils that use longlife specifications are bad too. I am using Mobil 1 ESP 5w-30 now. What oil would you recommend?
@andycharger4 ай бұрын
Hi buddy and thanks for your comment. I would not use long life oils in the engine due to the additives that dilute down its protective qualities. A good regular oil that you change every 5000 or so miles is the way forward.
@kingchooet99664 ай бұрын
@@andycharger Hello, thanks for your reply. What would you recommend? Because i don't know wether or not mobil1 ESP 5w30 is a longlife oil or not. I do know it is VW504/507 spec.
@GaryTaylorvw10 ай бұрын
Hi any experience with Liqui Moly? I’m just collecting parts now to fully rebuild mine before I put it in my project so want to use the best oil from the start I’ve got lots of liqui moly 5w 40 if it’s good to use I’ll use that, bought it in bulk for previous jaguar xfr
@andycharger10 ай бұрын
Hi Gary. As long as its VW spec (504/507) and you are changing it often, I cant see why it would hurt. No personal experience with Liquimoly myself I am afraid. Let me know how you get on.
@koopakoop4 ай бұрын
This was very interesting. Thank you
@andycharger4 ай бұрын
Thank you for your feedback! 👍
@RNvidcast4 ай бұрын
Just wondering if the problem is less apparent on the MK2 TT's?
@andycharger4 ай бұрын
I believe so. Issues such as the stamping of the chain had been sorted by then for sure. The maintenance carried out should apply to all variants of the engine though 👍 thanks for the comment
@RNvidcast4 ай бұрын
@@andycharger thanks and good video. I ran a garage until 2007 when I retrained and left the industry. It was abundantly clear even at that stage long life service schedules were a disastrous gimmick with many issues on VAG cars that I thought were a thing of the past. My advice was always to ignore the schedule and stick to a maximum of 12k miles between services.
@CarChris82 Жыл бұрын
Nice one mate very informative and should help people get more life out of their chains ⛓ 👍
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Thanks mate. I hope it helps fellow 3.2 owners. I think we take a look at my chains again next Saturday!
@santi0797 Жыл бұрын
Hello Andy, excelent video. Is this also applicable to the MK2 Audi tt (2007 to 2012) 3.2 v6?
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Hi Santi. Thanks for your kind words. I believe many of the early issues with the chain stamp were eliminated by the Mk2 but it does affect early ones. Also a lot of the principles behind the oil, using up the additives, absorbing the fuel, long life engine oil, etc will affect both mk1 and mk2 Audi TT 3.2 engines. I hope that helps!
@Scoupe40011 ай бұрын
Mk2 2006-2010 for 3.2. And yes oil changes are just as vital. Chain still needs replacement. Due to horrendous histories with belts, people know to change them at 60k. But somehow people think chains last forever. They don’t. So 100k very sensible - they do snap. Especially where not cared for as per this video, or under high strain (often a modified car due to its low second hand price and yet such good potential for tuning).
@richardgeorge8120 Жыл бұрын
Very good mate - excellent content
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Thank you buddy! I appreciate it! Are you rolling down for breakfast next weekend at Route 1066?
@zimbabwayne5626 Жыл бұрын
Great video Andy. I thankfully always leave the car run for 10mins after starting before i set off on any journey. Really informative. And good to know that over kill i.e more often than not servicing is beneficial. Is there anything that alodes to fuel type? Mine is in 98k now. However been running on Shell vpower since ownership 7k ago and in the time ive owned it had two services
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Yeah letting it warm up on tickover without putting it under load is probably best. Yearly oil changes seem to be the best thing to protect it.
@kurtohnehelmundgurt Жыл бұрын
Top Top👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻 Owner of a Golf MK4 V6 2.8 HGP Biturbo with only 38.000km And a A3 8p 3.2 with over 300.000km and the first Chain. No Longlife since 200.000km. Only Addinol 5W-40 since 2013
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Good work Kurt! 👍
@kingchooet99669 ай бұрын
Why no longlife? I use motul specific 5w-30 and change it every 12.000km.
@maveric07386 ай бұрын
Great video! The link is broken.
@andycharger6 ай бұрын
Which link buddy? I just tried the links (and the links to the documents on the web page it takes you to) and they all work. Perhaps they were not working yesterday temporarily
@maveric07386 ай бұрын
@@andycharger now they’re working. For some reason they weren’t working yesterday. Keep up the good work.
@seanaj Жыл бұрын
Great video andy is the mobil1 oil shown the oil you would use in your 3.2? My chain was done about 8 months ago so im gona take your advice and change the oil more frequently! Thanks
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Hi Seanaj. Thanks for your comments. I think the mobil1 0W-40 is the minimum that should be used and a lot of comments seem to be to use the Mobil1 5W-40.
@kingchooet99669 ай бұрын
@@andychargerWould Motul 5W30 be any good?
@DeePaignall Жыл бұрын
Maybe 3 more manufacturers - Ford also used the VR6 in the Galaxy, and Winnebago used it in their motorhomes! (Maybe Bentley use 2 in the W12)
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Yes I believe that Ford used the predecessor to this engine, the 2.8L vr6 in the galaxy.
@jurisd2559 Жыл бұрын
Perfect review, thanks! 👍
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your kind words Juris! It is a truly great engine!
@jbt3697 ай бұрын
Budget for a chain replacement every one-hundred thousand miles. That's how long the chain lasts. Given that, a chain replacement isn't all that expensive. I've done it twice.
@andycharger7 ай бұрын
Good effort on changing the chains. That is well above my pay grade! How did you find it?
@jbt3697 ай бұрын
@@andycharger I'm sorry, I should have said I paid a competent shop to swap them out. It's an '04 I bought in '07, and drive it today. Do the maintenance, and it's a very reliable car.
@gijsvermeule2255 Жыл бұрын
just wondering if the mk1's 3.2 differs from the mk2's 3.2 engine
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your comment. Essentially the same engine but with newer revision of some components, including the chain. It still good practice to follow many of the tips in this video though to prolong the life of the engine. I hope that helps and appreciate you asking the question.
@sarunaspurvinis463 Жыл бұрын
During oil change on my A3 3.2 I started wondering how oil filter is sealed and how the streams flow trough the filter. Maybe there are some engineers to explain?
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Hi Sarunas. I’m no engineer but if you have the filter to hand you will see it’s about the size of a soft drinks can. From what I can see the oil pump draws on the plastic “straw” like bit in the middle which draws the oil through the filter from the pan.
@sarunaspurvinis463 Жыл бұрын
@@andycharger Thing that confuses me that straw is not a straw, not a tube.
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
@@sarunaspurvinis463 you are right. It just for plugging it in! I will investigate! 👍
@sarunaspurvinis463 Жыл бұрын
@@andycharger And its not even sealing because diameter of that plastic ending is way too small to fit tight in to housing center nozzle.
@manuelnaval40029 ай бұрын
Im planning on buying a mk2 3.2 and most of my trips are short journeys (3-6 miles), also I live in the south of Spain, Where most of the time weather is warm or very hot. I do around 5000 miles annually, should I discard it or is it okay? (I basically use my car for leisure)
@andycharger9 ай бұрын
Hi Manuel. The short journeys will not be good for the engine. They need to be warmed up to get the oil to temperature and burn off the pollutants. Otherwise the engine will suffer from corrosion and damage. Repeated Short journeys are never good fit this engine. Entirely up to you my friend!
@wolfestepariowolfestepario3416 Жыл бұрын
Buenas noches, vi su video y me pareció muy interesante y educativo, lamentablemente entendí las cosas a medias porque no hablo inglés, interpreté algunas frases de los subtítulos. La importancia del cuidado del motor, empleando el aceite adecuado, el calentamiento del mismo, previo a realizar recorridos cortos, los factores que influyen en el daño principalmente a la cadena de distribución. La necesidad de no atenerse al mantenimiento indicado por el manual, hacerlo cada año, etc. lo que no me quedó muy claro fue lo del TBN, un factor a considerar en los aditivos del aceite, etc. Felicidades por su canal, pero sería recomendable que intentara incluir subtítulos en español, sobre todo ante el uso de tecnicismos con los que uno no está familiarizado. Pienso que ha de haber muchos hispanoparlantes interesados en el tema. Gracias. Saludos desde México.
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Gracias. He agregado subtítulos en español.
@wolfestepariowolfestepario3416 Жыл бұрын
Excelente, agradezco su amabilidad. Felicidades por su canal, voy a revisar sus videos con los subtítulos. Saludos.
@russelldownesdownes5618 Жыл бұрын
Great vid what oil do you use for your 225 and which would be suitable for my 190 .👍
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Hi Russell. I believe the preferred grade is a fully synthetic 5W-30 such as the Castrol Edge. I hope that helps!
@russelldownesdownes5618 Жыл бұрын
@@andycharger cheer’s for that Andy
@sharpsconsultancy2342 Жыл бұрын
What is the background music please?
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Hi there. Its Kurt by Cheel. Its a great track and popular on a lot of KZbin videos.
@SouljahRIX66 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the info! Does the EA888 engine suffer from the same issues, I drive a '14 2.0 TT S-Line BE?
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Hi Souljah. That I do not know. This is a 3.2 VR6 engine and inrelated to the 2.0 Petrol units I believe.
@SouljahRIX66 Жыл бұрын
@@andycharger Thanks for getting back to me Andy, no probs.👍
@G1CHO6 ай бұрын
It was in the ford galaxy as well
@stephenmcananama339 Жыл бұрын
Very educational video!!! Have any changes been made from the mk1 and mk2 3.2 VR6?
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Hi Stephen. Thanks for your comments and support! I believe the chains were revised in the mk2 not long after it was released (a year or so in) and other improvements were made also. I will see what elese I can find out.
@djal3xus11 ай бұрын
I have to add in that your statement about the chain stretch is not right but yet not quite off. Yes indeed if your banks exceeded 8KW they must be checked, but the engine may be not timed correctly or due to mechanical malfunction it could even jump a tooth that will immediately reflect the angle, yet no chain stretch. Also you may have stretched chain within the threshold of 8 degreese. There is no set in stone way to 100% check it, but we know that once the chain is way off the cars will always show 2 errors. 1 most often an error related to the HPFP sensor and 2 error for the low pressure of the HPFP. If you get them you can be almost 99% sure that you have a chain issue. And lastly it is not always the case with these engines when you hear the chain rattling when you already have the chain stretched. So you should always look for some VAG expert that knows what he is doing vs some random mechanic out there.
@andycharger11 ай бұрын
Thanks for your additional info and feedback. It is appreciated
@khwezyquestngwenya2257 Жыл бұрын
Andy I would like to find out which one is more powerful between BHE & BUB?
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Interesting question and sorry I have taken so long to reply! I think they both output 247 BHP so possibly both the same?
@JB91710 Жыл бұрын
All things be equal, which is the better engine to go with, the 2.0 or the 3.2? They both have their problems, but which is the better option for reliability?
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
I guess it all depends what you are looking for. The 2.0 tfsi engine in the mk2 seems a robust reliable engine and the 3.2 is a solid pure power beast. The tfsi has more tuning potential but nothing beats the sound of the VR6!
@JB91710 Жыл бұрын
@@andycharger Does the VR6 engine have to come out to replace the chain? Is the OBD2 check reliable for checking the status of the chain?
@JB91710 Жыл бұрын
@@andycharger How would you rate the automatic to the manual for reliability?
@ukwan10 ай бұрын
Same as all engines, the manufacturer service intervals are a joke.
@boogie1634510 ай бұрын
Very Funny Great video Own a 2008 vr6 Needs A transmission only 125500 ml. Mint condition Wanna fix it?
@andycharger10 ай бұрын
Hi Boogie. Sounds like a mk2 on 2008. What’s up with the trans?
@boogie1634510 ай бұрын
@@andycharger I get code P0890 Drives fine when cold then goes to limp mode stuck in 2 gear . Maybe mechatronics??
@andycharger10 ай бұрын
@@boogie16345 definitely something to get into an Audi specialist my friend!
@boogie1634510 ай бұрын
@@andycharger I thought that would be you.Im in Vegas if you want to adopt the project for your videos?
@W0ULDY0ULIKE Жыл бұрын
Does anybody know what year audi updated the chain design?
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
I believe it was resolved early in the mk2 lifecycle. However even the replaced chains suffer stretch
@W0ULDY0ULIKE Жыл бұрын
@@andycharger ahh okay thanks for the fast reply, I'm looking to buy a mk2 on the weekend, do you know what obd11 your friend has, the cheap one or the more expensive one by any chance, I don't know if they have the same features or not ?
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
@@W0ULDY0ULIKE he has OBDEleven but if you watch my OBDII video on the channel it covers a cheap reader from Amazon for £12.99 that reads the chains 👍
@W0ULDY0ULIKE Жыл бұрын
@@andycharger I know its the obdeleven but there are different ones, I didn't know whether it was only the more expensive one that done the chains, do you think they all do it?
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
@@W0ULDY0ULIKE no the type of reader is called OBDII which looks like Eleven. The brand Chris used is actually called OBDEleven! obdeleven.com/
@davem6442 Жыл бұрын
And in my A3 8P. With a tune its pretty quick.
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
Did you tune your 3.2? What does it push now?
@davem6442 Жыл бұрын
@@andycharger Did a Unitronic Stage 1+ and a few other minor tweaks so its about 270hp now.
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
@@davem6442 good work Dave! I’ve seen some running paint can sized air intakes on the 3.2 which make little difference. Interesting that a tune gets up to about 10% increase! 👍
@tnetroP9 ай бұрын
Correction at 2:10. The Corrado had a 2.9 VR6, not a 2.8. Source: The Corrado VR6 in my garage.
@andycharger9 ай бұрын
Very sorry. Thanks for the correction! 👍
@tnetroP9 ай бұрын
@@andychargerActually you might be right depending on region. We got the 2.9 in the Corridor in Europe. The US got 2.8. I'm not sure what other regions got. These early engines were 12 valve. The MK3 Golf got the 2.8 12 valve in the Golf VR6. There was then a 2.8 Golf mk4 V6 4Motion which used the newer 24 valve version of the engine. I also had both of those. It's a wonderful engine.
@jonrreid657 ай бұрын
Please recommend where I can get timing chain replacement for £1500, I have been quoted £3500.
@andycharger7 ай бұрын
Hi Jon. £3500 is the highest I have heard for a timing chain. Are they doing something else as well?
@jonrreid657 ай бұрын
@@andycharger that's at indie-tech Milton Keynes with clutch. TTshop just north of Luton wanted £4500 .
@Scoupe40011 ай бұрын
It wasn’t a cheap car at new and as any car like that you can’t expect to pay nothing - most people do though. I have always used high grade fully synthetic and changed at 10k or 1 year. The car will only get a minimum of 20 minutes drive to work, I take a longer route. And I fully expect to replace chain at 100k. And whilst at it, the car will get new fly wheel and clutch being all off at the same time. It’s part of the life cost. Same care taken with the haldex. Loved the Mk1 and hence nabbed the last VR6 in a mk2 which doesn’t sound as good. It’s a keeper.
@Roscoe_Wells3 ай бұрын
If the timing chain isn't making noise you're asking to fox something that isn't broken. You're likely going to cause an issue that didn't exist.
@andycharger3 ай бұрын
@@Roscoe_Wells chains can be noisy without needing to be replaced and vice versa. Sometimes there is no audible warning.
@trap9273 Жыл бұрын
Why not just get an mk2 they look so much better
@andycharger Жыл бұрын
An opinion you are entitled to but as you can see from my channel, I cover mk1 Audi TTs.
@ca93245 ай бұрын
Highly Disagree Change engine oil every 5k
@andycharger5 ай бұрын
Yes for optimal protection or every 6 months whichever comes first
@jittychitty10 ай бұрын
10k oil changes... that's funny... do it every 3k.
@johnyacoub696 ай бұрын
Outdated and wrong. Waste of money and resources.
@Fmandan774 ай бұрын
The truth is 3K is extremely early for a healthy engine these days and how an engine is used needs to be taken into consideration. 5K to 8K miles depending on use and engine age is likely a healthy routine for most modern engines. The engine also makes a difference. Turbo engines need more frequent oil changes etc. My daughters 150k mile Honda N/A 4cyl doesn't burn any oil and after 5 or 6K miles still looks golden in color.
@jittychitty4 ай бұрын
@@Fmandan77 Oil changes are cheap, but engines are not. You can certainly push your engine if you'd like... but I'm going to keep mine lubricated with clean and fresh oil that will allow it to have much less wear in the end, than an engine that has oil with wear particles circulating in it. Best of luck brother.