Jump to content

Uriel

Members
  • Posts

    48
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Uriel's Achievements

Contributor

Contributor (5/17)

  • First Post
  • Collaborator
  • Conversation Starter
  • Week One Done
  • One Month Later

Recent Badges

0

Reputation

  1. I got a new OEM compressorfor my 110 Octy tdi - fitted and gassed for £415 at Autorads / Statller in Sheffield back in April. (http://www.autorads.co.uk/). Work had a 1 year warranty. Unfortunately that's going to be a bit of a bit of a treck for the OP.
  2. Copied from another post of mine :
  3. Update on this: Further diagnosis did reveal a definite sticking VNT issue. Realtime logging of requested boost indicated that it was a bit all over the place but mainly overboosting. Remedy was going to be turbo off and remanufacture or replace - plus I wasn't going to DIY it. Unfortunately the whole 'to do' list was longer (needed thermostat, wheel bearing, brake discs + pads replacing sooner rather than later). Tax was coming up (in the engine size rather than CO2 bracket so nearly double a 2001 car)and I had the offer of a long-term interest free car loan from a family member. To cut a long story short, I'm no longer a Skoda Octavia owner. PXed for a 2010 Honda Insignt ES at the weekend. Will copy this info into threads where discussion of the car's limp mode was active to bring a little closure. I guess I'll be a lot more scarce around these parts from now on.
  4. I'm getting the same code and have yet to get to the bottom of what is causing it. My car is also an SLX TDi, a 2000 reg with about 96k on it. Mine's intermittent, and it's had the issue sinc I bought it in April. It's often fine for motorway driving but give it a particularly steep hill and accelerate and it may drop into limp mode. I've found I can replicate it 100% by booting it over the brow of a hill in 3rd accelerating up to motorway speeds. Spirited driving to high revs/load seems to temporarily improve it but is not a permanent solution (and it's never stopped it limping with the hill brow test). Investigations so far haven't turned up anything conclusive. I suspect something is up with the turbo control or boost. This could be a solenoid, vacuum piping, boost leak, turbo vanes, control ring or actuator... Tried swapping out a few things and checking the piping. Only thing found to date was a bad connection between piping and intercooler (not completely off though). That was put right but the limp issues have continued. I have read of two people on forums solving or working around it. One had an intercooler / piping connection issue. The other ran without the EGR solenoid plugged in. I've tried both and no joy. Edit: Sorry - having to reschedule diagnostics.
  5. Seems similar to noses mine makes on light braking, particularly when changing gear and cornering at low speed. Only thing found so far that might contribute to noise is a tiny bit of play in the NSF wheel bearing. Odd as noise isn't restricted to left of the car.
  6. Very similar to the OP - I'm running an SLX TDI in Sheffield with 95k on it. Mines a 2000 though. My brim to brim mpg has ranged from 38 mpg (mainly town driving) to 60mpg (trip to Cornwall - mainly motorways). Over 2500 ish miles since I got it I'm averaging about 46 mpg calculated or 48 mpg on the computer. On the daily commute to Chesterfield I get 49 to 54 mpg on the way there and 40 - 46 on the way back. 30mpg would be really poor - I only get that on really short trips involving hills and speedbumps. Running the climate control seems to reduce efficiency but not by a huge amount.
  7. The 1.4 8v was sluggish and thirsty enough in the Fabia. Dread to think what it would be like in something Octavia sized.
  8. Out of interest, did you reuse or replace the bolts in the turbo?
  9. Nope. Instructions here though: http://www.audi-sport.net/vb/a4-s4-forum-b5-chassis/107121-un-sticking-your-tdi-vnt-turbo-vanes.html Caveat emptor and all that...
  10. Mr Muscle Oven Cleaner and Millers, plus a bit of cardboard and a tube could be had for £15 though...
  11. Application is with exhaust downpipe off. You apply cleaner, leave it for a while, exersise VNT mechanism, apply alkali neutraliser and it comes with a fuel additive. It's a bit like using the Mr Muscle technique, with something to make it a bit safer for the cat, followed by a high dose of Millers. Heck of a markup really but a lot cheaper than turbo off and manual clean. R-Tech in Hinkley used to do the Innotec Method for about £90 all in. I believe that they now advise customers to remove and properly clean the turbo as Innotec turned out to usually only offer a temporary improvement (plus once they started doing it they saw what Innotec left behind). I think they now do turbo removal and cleaning for a little over £200.
  12. Take it to an aircon specialist. Fast fit places usually won't diagnose faults and could do more harm than good if they get it wrong.
  13. My best brim to brim was 60 MPG which included a long journey with climate control turned off. In normal usage (9 mile each way commute, plus variable weekend and social trips) I'm averaging somewhere around 43 mpg. Last 2.5k miles since I got the SLX TDI gives 48 MPG on the trip computer and 46 MPG calculated.
  14. My SLX TDI only goes to 200 before --- . My previous Fabia 1.4 8v Comfort would get the odd number up to several hundred. The other main differences between the trip computers are that the Fabia had genuinely instantaneous consumption readout. On the SLX it reads (according to the manual) the fuel consumption over 30m stints (so is less responsive and updates periodically as you're driving). Also the Fabia's computer would estimate remaining range but the SLX doesn't do this. I think the 2000-2001 facelift models have the same trip computer software as the Fabia.
  15. The rod should move into the actuator under vacuum and the spring should push it out when vacuum is released.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

Welcome to BRISKODA. Please note the following important links Terms of Use. We have a comprehensive Privacy Policy. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.