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kevin8661

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  1. Ok. To answer your question, I don't know. You may be right but why not believe the manufacturer? If you don't believe the Audi intervals are suitable then it's only opinion. I don't know what the construction of current timing belts is so I'm on the fence as to what is too long. I believe there's no natural rubber content so they don't degrade and they are a much more durable than in the past. I just don't know. I'm not cynical enough to think Audi want them to snap especially as they probably wouldn't be getting the business for older cars anyway. However there are still people who insist on changing their oil every 3 to 5K miles even if it's less than a year since the last change. Maybe this is the same. Do what you're comfortable with. Problem is the cost of breakage is so great it may be best to err on the side of caution anyway. Again, I just don't know.
  2. Don't know what you mean. I simply answered the question which was what is the interval. I quoted the Audi UK intervals which are in line with what Europe have been doing for years. If individuals decide to do it earlier than that's entirely their call. You then enter the same debate as "is flexible servicing bad for engines or is branded fuel better than supermarket?"
  3. My Audi app for my Q5 TDI states 140,000 miles with no age limit. I'll not be going that far but probably 80k ish if I still have the car unless my specialist tells me otherwise.
  4. I think Audi UK were the outlier on timing belt changes. The intervals certainly in Europe were longer and Audi UK were being asked why they were out of line with everywhere else and being accused on various forums of it being a revenue generator. All they've done is brought the intervals in line with Europe. I've not seen any evidence of timing belts in Europe going bang. I'm not clear from the original post but I assume the belt has snapped. Bad luck, bad batch of belts or some other engine issue causing it? Audi's response is poor but not unexpected and personally I wouldn't use them. I'd go to a specialist.
  5. I was told 19 inches would fit but I never tested it. Mine was the TDI facelifted in 2020 so brakes might be bigger on yours being the tfsi. If it is a big problem the cost of upgrading to air suspension would probably be a lot less than selling the car and buying a replacement. When I looked 2 years ago there was only an air system for the previous model but that might have changed by now. I understand why you'd want to keep the V6. Don't know whether softening the springs would result in poor handling due to the power. Good luck.
  6. Hi I've been there. I had a 2017 MKII Q5 TDI sline and wasn't particularly unhappy with the ride. Bought a 2023 SQ5 TDI at 3 months old and loved everything except the ride, the synthetic sound and false exhausts. As you say its jarring especially on our rough roads. I found the adjustable dampers made no apparent difference. Mine was fitted with 20inch wheels and I did consider going to 19inch and investigated a retrofit air suspension but I couldn't find one and also there would have been warranty issues. I had it for 6 months (10,000 miles) and traded it in for a Q5 Vorsprung that has air suspension. I wish I'd tried a SQ5 with air suspension. Love the ride on the Q5 now.
  7. The fact they can knock off £1300 immediately shows how much they try to overcharge. They wanted £208 for a sunroof service and I got it done for £60 at a specialist near Newcastle. Swift Moror Engineering in case anyone is interested.
  8. It defies logic.
  9. Surely it's made of gold. There are companies that clean them or alternatively find either an Audi or DPF specialist and try them. I didn't take out Audi's warranty/servicing/ MOT combinations because I see them as a cheap loss leader so they can screw you on consumables like brake pads/discs etc. Getting this done elsewhere might affect the warranty for things affected by the DPF (if any) but at that price in my opinion it's worth the risk.
  10. I can't understand why they would have your car off the road waiting for used parts unless it's not an Audi warranty and there is a limit to the costs they will pay out. Everything done so far isn't cheap.
  11. Did you do a search for Judder? I posted about this a while ago.
  12. Intermittent faults are the worst. Hopefully it won't come back.




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