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Showing content with the highest reputation on 07/30/2023 in all areas

  1. Those values, even the "improved" ones don't seem right. I can cruise at 68mph along A roads for approx. 35 miles and achieve ~75mpg, if I push it, I still get ~65 mpg, according to the trip data. My only gauge is I had a A4 BB 2.0 diesel and for the same amount of fuel and journey, I'm now getting ~100 extra miles per tank. I only use Esso standard fuel with the required dose of Archoil. There could be something more sinister going on there. Edit: what's the service history? I changed the air filter and spray cleaned the MAF sensor shortly after getting mine, but I don't recall the MPGs ever being as low as you're seeing. I also think my car has the latest version of software.
    1 point
  2. The DPF cleaner will not solve the issue. The issue Is the EGR cooler, unfortunately.
    1 point
  3. That's broken from the radiator mate. You need to replace the radiator. There's no way I'd be driving that 15 miles, get it towed.
    1 point
  4. I bought a 12 year old focus several years ago with 50k on the clock original timing belt, sold it to a friend who put another 60k on it over the space of several years. He never had the belt changed. He sold it back to me in 2021 cheap, so cheap I give it to my ex girlfriend who needed a car, anyway to cut a long story short she sold it last year with over 120k on the clock and I see it on Facebay a few months later with a suspected snapped belt! The car was a 2005 model so the belt lasted well past its use by date and recommended mileage. I've seen a few manufacturers giving two intervals lately I.e 80k warranty and 120k out of warranty. Personally I've always done the belt on the cars I care about on mileage alone and not had a belt snap on me yet. I think someone that uses their car alot is gonna hit the mileage long before the belt is considered out of date and those that don't use the car a lot don't do enough miles for the belt to be that badly degraded in the time frame.
    1 point
  5. This is illogical to me, and I believe it is engineeringly unsafe, and wouldn’t be for me. While noting David’s - Itspointless- comments, I’m afraid I would have to counter the view that …’so age isn’t an issue’. It can, and is indeed an issue. The ongoing serviceability of a completely unstressed belt stored in a box for say 5 years, cannot be compared with a fitted belt which has been subjected to hundreds of highly stressed stop/ starts every week, sometimes in sub zero temperatures. If (in caps) Audi U.K. and I then guess Audi Global ( rather than a dealer) are saying there is now only a mileage limit, then how many of us doing short but regular low mileage trips around town etc. would be prepared to chance our engines ,when running on a 20 + year vehicle? Darren’s dealer’s phone call is interesting, and I’m not sure whether it was an out-of-the-blue call, or it was as a result of Darren having made a prior enquiry -? Audi economics?? Profit is made by the Audi dealer when fitting new belts and VAG make a profit on resale of the belt kits manufactured for them. However, if a belt fails, the potential for revenue is considerably higher where the vehicle is declared beyond economical repair and has to be replaced, or a very expensive engine replacement arranged - potential for far more profit! Now the Audi Economics makes logical sense - to Audi!! Sorry folks but it still doesn’t to my pocket. Additional point to consider - renewing the auxiliary belt -? I can see this timing belt scenario becoming an ‘inherited issue’ for buyers in the future, as the baby is passed on as the purchaser’s responsibility. Kind regards, Gareth.
    1 point
  6. I know on my A6 2.5tdi it's 8 years. Which has never been a problem.
    1 point
  7. Well it seems after a visit to audi and buying a genuine oil filter! The union is part of the filter itself, no more filters from ebay I guess. Oil pressure warning has stopped.
    1 point
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