WARRANTY DENIED! 2022 Audi S5 $30K BILL! Tearing Down Catastrophic Overheat 3.0 TFSI V6 CWGD Engine

Автокөліктер мен көлік құралдары

For parts please visit www.Importapart.com or email us at Sales@importapart.com
Today we have the NEWEST engine we've ever had on the channel. This is the CWGD/EA839 3.0L Turbo from a 2022 Audi S5. This engine suffered a catastrophic overheat when a coolant hose ruptured. Apparently the cause of the hose rupturing was not related to a manufactures defect and the customer had to foot the bill out of pocket, over 30k to replace this engine on a new car!
Today we tear down this engine all the way to see just how bad it was. Could it have been fixed? Was an engine replacement necessary? This teardown easily answers those questions as well as showcases some pretty neat technology on this still current engine.
Why am I doing this? My name is Eric and I own and run a full service auto salvage business called Importapart. Part of our model includes dismantling and tearing down blown up, bad, and core engines to salvage the good usable components and recycling the rest. We do not rebuild engines, merely supply parts to those who do!
I really hope you enjoyed this teardown. As always I love all of the comments, feedback and even the criticism. Catch you on the next one!
-Eric

Пікірлер: 2 500

  • @Flies2FLL
    @Flies2FLL23 күн бұрын

    "They don't want you to work on it" You just explained the modern automotive industry.....

  • @Markworth

    @Markworth

    23 күн бұрын

    I can't wait until the cam in valve cover becomes widespread. Then no one will want to work on it.

  • @peterpeter5666

    @peterpeter5666

    23 күн бұрын

    so true. its buy a car drive it for 5 years then dispose and buy a new one.

  • @kristensorensen2219

    @kristensorensen2219

    23 күн бұрын

    Lucky those bolts aren't alluminium 😂

  • @kaesden

    @kaesden

    23 күн бұрын

    the modern "anything" industry.

  • @mrpantur7280

    @mrpantur7280

    23 күн бұрын

    this is true on motorcycles aswell. when my 2018 yamaha scooter needed a new top end it was nearly impossible to work on it and they had a spacial tool required for basically every bolt.

  • @christopherweise438
    @christopherweise43823 күн бұрын

    "This has a 0% chance of working." - Eric Proceeds to work perfectly.

  • @samholdsworth420

    @samholdsworth420

    23 күн бұрын

    Eric's a humble man 😂

  • @christopherweise438

    @christopherweise438

    23 күн бұрын

    @@samholdsworth420 - Yea.....i always set the bar low for myself. I would've said the same thing had it been me in that situation.

  • @09corvettezr1

    @09corvettezr1

    23 күн бұрын

    Eric pulls the “milkshake pump” gets pristine coolant. Eric pulls the “oil pump” gets milkshake.

  • @Duken4evr29

    @Duken4evr29

    23 күн бұрын

    Before giving one's best effort, it is helpful to set low expectations for the outcome of that effort, as they can be exceeded and it isn't a crippling disappointment if they aren't. This sums up my approach to life. Try hard, expect little and be grateful when things occasionally do go my way. Who knew Eric is such a philosophical life coach? 😄

  • @Supremxcyxi

    @Supremxcyxi

    22 күн бұрын

    Yes

  • @SeeClamp
    @SeeClamp23 күн бұрын

    Eric, I just saw a video on Rainman Ray's Repairs that discussed your collaboration with Ray in saving the van for the afflicted family. Hats off to you, brother! God bless you and Ray!! This is why I watch you guys. I am very proud of you both!

  • @peacefrog0521

    @peacefrog0521

    21 күн бұрын

    Link to said video?

  • @BenjaminCronce

    @BenjaminCronce

    20 күн бұрын

    @@peacefrog0521 kzread.info/dash/bejne/dmemxq-zn6zQlqw.html

  • @peacefrog0521

    @peacefrog0521

    18 күн бұрын

    Found it kzread.info/dash/bejne/dmemxq-zn6zQlqw.htmlsi=aBPeaNf4fgGzq0dR

  • @bjbosche

    @bjbosche

    18 күн бұрын

    @@peacefrog0521 kzread.info/dash/bejne/dmemxq-zn6zQlqw.html

  • @ginog5037

    @ginog5037

    13 күн бұрын

    You and Ray are good people, God Bless.

  • @davidclark3304
    @davidclark330423 күн бұрын

    I often think about the irony of this. The engineers spend years developing this exotic technology, the advertisers flaunt it, the dealers brag, and the owners are all proud to own such machinery. And then in a few years it goes to the scrap yard.

  • @rewing4880

    @rewing4880

    20 күн бұрын

    Tell my 2015 VW 1.8 turbo that. At 55k miles and it runs perfect.

  • @andrewnajarian5994

    @andrewnajarian5994

    20 күн бұрын

    They should save everyone the trouble and just ship them straight to the scrap yards! 😂

  • @tooltime9260

    @tooltime9260

    20 күн бұрын

    I say the same thing when I'm in the yard looking for parts. No matter what you drive, except exotics, that's where they all go. I still have a picture of a Rolls in the yard. it got picked clean in 3 days.

  • @dil6969

    @dil6969

    20 күн бұрын

    I don't think we'll ever see better built or longer lasting luxury cars than the Lexus LS400 and the Mercedes W124. The sort of customers that buy luxury cars nowadays do not care about longevity outside of the warranty period. They can afford to replace them every few years, and it's clear the design priorities have shifted to match customer preference.

  • @MrWilburlandaverde

    @MrWilburlandaverde

    20 күн бұрын

    Over a decade later and the 3.2 vr6 in my audi is still running and still wanted. Saying they end up in a scrap yard is delusional

  • @Mattthewanderer
    @Mattthewanderer23 күн бұрын

    Just once I want to hear a Wilhelm scream when you throw a perfectly reusable chain guide.

  • @daewooparts

    @daewooparts

    23 күн бұрын

    Or the water pump & electronic thermostat 😆

  • @pauldevassy2379

    @pauldevassy2379

    23 күн бұрын

    I barely trust a *new* German chain guide, no way I’d reuse one.

  • @goldenboi7685

    @goldenboi7685

    23 күн бұрын

    And get him sued by Disney?

  • @emgriffiths9743

    @emgriffiths9743

    23 күн бұрын

    Should mount a bunch of those in an epoxy table

  • @Kingsoupturbo

    @Kingsoupturbo

    23 күн бұрын

    Those audi guides are so expensive, and chains, and many of them there is no aftermarket. Kind of makes buying any rear timing chain engine car, not a real prospect.

  • @someguywithaphone5921
    @someguywithaphone592123 күн бұрын

    "Many feeler gauges of thickness". Yes Eric, Yes it is.

  • @Spookkoe

    @Spookkoe

    21 күн бұрын

    Americans will use any measuring system rather than the metric system ;)

  • @alabamared2568
    @alabamared256823 күн бұрын

    Eric as a person that doesn't follow you as much I'm here to say thank you for helping the family in Florida with Rayman ray to get the motor for the Dodge van replacement that is an awesome thing both of you are doing together the family who has medical issues will be forever grateful as am I and the viewers from Rays channel bless you both!!!!❤❤

  • @mesolith
    @mesolith20 күн бұрын

    I've watched you for a long time and my wife will generally watch. I have to add a little more narrative for her to understand what you are doing. On occasion, I get exhausted watching you because I think, 'Thank the Lord, that is not me trying to work on one of my engines'...which I used to do...before I was 89 with two new knees. I pretend that my engine work went as smoothly as yours while knowing it never did. Right now, my 1996 Buick Roadmaster Estate Wagon (5.7 liter) needs a power steering hose. I have someone I will trust to do that. Thanks for the good cheer and hard work that I do not have to do.

  • @nicholas_scott
    @nicholas_scott23 күн бұрын

    My wifes 7 year old land rover hit a small rock and it caused a coolant leak. She figured she would keep on driving until I had a chance to look at it. People make bad choices. Expensive repair.

  • @yeahitskimmel

    @yeahitskimmel

    23 күн бұрын

    My wife will pull over and call me after a scary pot hole even when the car is obviously fine, so it can go both ways lol

  • @RadDadisRad

    @RadDadisRad

    23 күн бұрын

    Your bad choice was getting married? I hear ya

  • @Wesleystewart78

    @Wesleystewart78

    23 күн бұрын

    ​ @yeahitskimmel sounds like my wife I have mud tires so they are ruff when it's cold out every winter she freaks out and calls me because it has a bad vibration lol

  • @joshuawest9537

    @joshuawest9537

    23 күн бұрын

    Dude you just reminded me to check my coolant thank you oml

  • @MeaHeaR

    @MeaHeaR

    23 күн бұрын

    ​​@@RadDadisRadHe's M.G.T.O.W, Now 🌞🤠😮🤓

  • @otakujhp
    @otakujhp23 күн бұрын

    That 100% deserves a rebuild.

  • @heathharry8424

    @heathharry8424

    23 күн бұрын

    yup, deck the heads and block, crack test, if ok, new bearings, new rings, pistons looks reasonable, but likely replace as it clearly overheated, re-assemble and away you go...it looks like in reasonably good condition...

  • @peterpeter5666

    @peterpeter5666

    23 күн бұрын

    Can't rebuilt German engines. Every time I've seen someone try ,they never lasted. Plus they don't have any tolerance for machine work to be done on them

  • @joskd8491

    @joskd8491

    23 күн бұрын

    @@peterpeter5666 an almost new Audi engine, overheated on both cilinderbanks, plastic waterpumpimpeller. Variable camshaft timing, electronic thermosthat, built-in failure points in my opinion. No good sign of engineering and building quality here. Throw-away engines, that's what they are

  • @jonmallard2176

    @jonmallard2176

    23 күн бұрын

    As an Audi tech who has worked on these engines, there's pretty much a 0% chance of rebuilding these without the factory tools required to do so. I know there's guys out there that would say "yeah, you could just rig something up to make it work" but you really can't on this engine. The timing alone requires cam locks, crank lock and locking pins for the zero lash pulley that you see removed at 14:15.

  • @peterpeter5666

    @peterpeter5666

    23 күн бұрын

    @@jonmallard2176 MY EXPERIENCE WITH German cars as a tech for 40 years is , what ever you do to these engines, after they fail is a bandage and they will eventually fail again in a short time. Pretty sure as a tech at audi when every you had engine issues , 99% of the time it was a new engine in a crate.

  • @user-ym6nq7hf3v
    @user-ym6nq7hf3v11 күн бұрын

    Former Audi tech here... These are actually a whole lot easier to tear down than the older engines. The stand and adapters from Audi for the V6 was like 20k. The table the pull them out was another 10k.

  • @JOutterbridge

    @JOutterbridge

    6 күн бұрын

    Can you do full timing and major repairs with the engine still in the car?

  • @jacobpickering8586

    @jacobpickering8586

    5 күн бұрын

    very curious how the dual cam lobes are operated at the different rpm ranges.

  • @quademasters249

    @quademasters249

    2 күн бұрын

    @@jacobpickering8586 Same. I suspect the lobes move from left to right on the shaft. The solenoid engages ramps on the lobes so when they turn the "lobes" follow. You can just barely see some splines under the cam lobes when he does a close up on the shafts.

  • @tilerman
    @tilerman3 күн бұрын

    I'm not even a car guy and watched the whole video, and coming from someone who can just about tell the difference between a steering wheel and a back bumper, i don't know who you guys get your head around this stuff, gave me the shivers just watching! And 30k, for an engine. Incredible.

  • @EvanHovis
    @EvanHovis23 күн бұрын

    After seeing this teardown. It makes me appreciate my honda K20 i adjusted the valves on today. 328,000 miles and it purrs. Had a leaky valve cover gasket so did some adjustments while i had it off

  • @piggy310

    @piggy310

    23 күн бұрын

    Same for my Camry 4cyl 5SFE, 355k miles and only time the engine was touched is a valve cover gasket

  • @dougrobinson8602

    @dougrobinson8602

    23 күн бұрын

    Honda K-series engines are amazing. I plan to get at least 300K on my K24.

  • @andrewdonohue1853

    @andrewdonohue1853

    23 күн бұрын

    my 2003 bonneville SSEi supercharged L67, 21 years old and just runs incredibly well. it only has 125K on it but still it runs like brand new. tons of torque (pulley swap), it's less then halfway through it's lifespan. 3800's, probably GM's best made V6..... ever.

  • @LePedant

    @LePedant

    23 күн бұрын

    SR20 life here, 280k still runs like a champ!

  • @jamesmedina2062

    @jamesmedina2062

    23 күн бұрын

    how much were the valves off of spec?

  • @peterolsson1470
    @peterolsson147023 күн бұрын

    I actually got Audi commercial breaks in this video. 😂

  • @tomrogers9467

    @tomrogers9467

    11 күн бұрын

    Take that as a warning!

  • @peterolsson1470

    @peterolsson1470

    11 күн бұрын

    @@tomrogers9467 yeah.

  • @DN-kz7xl

    @DN-kz7xl

    5 күн бұрын

    LOL. No way!

  • @Smakheed
    @Smakheed23 күн бұрын

    Checked my book, I've done 6 of these engines which had multiple head gasket breaches as you found, every single one was warrantied as soon as we found the head gasket issue, meaning new replacements were fitted (£32K/job). Each removed one was a complete teardown, wash and rebuild with head and block skims AND new shells, timing gear all round. Total cost £4Kper engine, majority being labour.

  • @Redshift-

    @Redshift-

    23 күн бұрын

    Madness 🙄 a, they don't have the ability or b, the Labour costs per hour are Laughable, c, I would demand a new Car with the new Engine if it was just months old like his Engine looked !!! Simple repair for a real Mechanic - By the way that residue coolant in the oil would mostly evaporate off with a 10 mile drive, So the Engine did not need a full strip down if the Block was Flat, Just a couple of oil changes.

  • @dennisyoung4631

    @dennisyoung4631

    21 күн бұрын

    “… with a dose of M.M.O. to help clean things out?”

  • @cornishcat11

    @cornishcat11

    21 күн бұрын

    @@dennisyoung4631 snake oil

  • @townhall05446

    @townhall05446

    19 күн бұрын

    Were those head gaskets faulty or did something else go wrong and the person kept driving anyhow - CAUSING the more serious engine damage? People are dumb and they'll take a chance rather than take a walk.

  • @desmondharney1185

    @desmondharney1185

    18 күн бұрын

    It had a water pipe burst loosing its coolant..causing head gasket failure

  • @busterellis7188
    @busterellis718817 күн бұрын

    I rented this exact car a few weeks ago. I got my first speeding ticket in 25 years. Never driven a car that goes from 80 to a 110 like this one did. This engine has some serious power in that little car.

  • @teleguy5699

    @teleguy5699

    10 күн бұрын

    S5 is no joke.

  • @kylerobertson9546
    @kylerobertson954623 күн бұрын

    That S5 thermostat was worth about $550 & $480 to install. Should have kept it ! Lol

  • @JohnSmith-pl2bk

    @JohnSmith-pl2bk

    23 күн бұрын

    It's been bathed in super hot coolant or steam........ not reliable any more?? Eric won't even consider selling it.....

  • @wino99999

    @wino99999

    23 күн бұрын

    I saw something get thrown into the waste bin, but was it the thermostat from this engine.....

  • @JohnSmith-pl2bk

    @JohnSmith-pl2bk

    23 күн бұрын

    @@wino99999 Yes. The chances of it being overheated were too great to allow Eric to ethically sell it... and anyway he always throws thermostats away....

  • @1djbecker

    @1djbecker

    23 күн бұрын

    I'm not sure how these are designed, but an overheat could easily have subtly ruined the thermostat. Traditional 'wax pellet' thermostats use a wax that only significantly expands when it reaches a critical temperature. The wax continues to expand if it gets hotter. The operating spring compensates for some expansion, but when it bottoms out some wax will escape. The missing wax results in a thermostat that still starts opening at the target temperature, but doesn't fully open until a much higher temperature. This effect is amplified in an ECU controlled thermostat. Those use a heating element in the wax to allow the ECU adjust the operating temperature while remaining fail-safe as a traditional thermostat if something goes wrong. During an overheat ECU will operate the embedded heater at full force in an attempt to cool the engine, possibly ruining the thermostat in an attempt to save the engine. Older ECUs didn't log this as a failure event. Perhaps this Audi does, and also logged how many times it warned the driver that something was wrong.

  • @jamesmedina2062

    @jamesmedina2062

    23 күн бұрын

    I will not modify a new 3000$ engine. Why young people will eagerly modify 30,000$ engine speaks to apathy and stupidity.

  • @spyderlogan4992
    @spyderlogan499223 күн бұрын

    The machine work on that engine is state of the art. Just beautiful to look at. Thanks Eric.

  • @johnarnold893

    @johnarnold893

    23 күн бұрын

    And totally over engineered for what it is.

  • @Thegonagle

    @Thegonagle

    23 күн бұрын

    For what it is? I mean, it’s compact, and the casting is obviously designed to be very strong but as lightweight as possible. I was prepared for yet another truly over-engineered positively infuriating German engine, and I was pleasantly surprised to be wrong. In my opinion, this might be one of the least “over engineered” engines I’ve seen in the modern era. It’s refreshingly free of gratuitous parts, moving and otherwise, and it’s refreshingly free of plastic and other cut-cost parts. Everything you see makes sense, like it was done for good reason. There’s a lack of unnecessary timing chains, idlers, tensioners, or guides, and the water pump isn’t buried under there. The cam chains counterrotate using the geared balance shaft to drive them reducing chain length and weight. The hot Vee is all the better to feed the turbos. The timing chains being on the “wrong” end makes it more compact. The unique camshaft/valve cover assembly is also simple, compact, and leads to shorter engine height. In addition to timing phasers on the intake and exhaust sprockets, the assembly also incorporates a simple mechanism equivalent to Honda V-TEC (specifically, V-TEC’s selectable cam profiles) without stepping on Honda’s toes. It’s no Ford 300, but those days are over and they aren’t coming back. For its feature set, I’ll dare say it, this Audi is almost minimalist.

  • @ferrumignis

    @ferrumignis

    23 күн бұрын

    @@johnarnold893 _" totally over engineered for what it is."_ And how would you have achieved the same power, torque, weight and fuel economy/emissions with less engineering?

  • @knight2425

    @knight2425

    23 күн бұрын

    These things are over engineered hence why they can take so much horsepower with relatively little work.

  • @normala3227

    @normala3227

    22 күн бұрын

    @@ferrumignis With a V8 LS, pushrods and compactness at fraction of the cost - $10k. LS may be a little less fuel efficient, but the difference in cost makes up for that. Audi engines are ridiculous complex and so expensive at over $30k for a V6 and $40K for a V8. Further, LS engines do not require replacement of cheap valve guides at 60 to 80 k miles.

  • @jeffreyweinzierl1509
    @jeffreyweinzierl150923 күн бұрын

    When you pulled the oil pump drive cover, it looked like someone gambled on a Taco Bell fart....and lost.

  • @garthmuir6023

    @garthmuir6023

    20 күн бұрын

    😂😂😂😂💩

  • @cyronader

    @cyronader

    19 күн бұрын

    i always lose on that gamble lol

  • @gwhizz44

    @gwhizz44

    19 күн бұрын

    Bahahaha! Run not the runs from Audi's.

  • @Orcinus1967

    @Orcinus1967

    18 күн бұрын

    LOLOL

  • @Bears58
    @Bears5822 күн бұрын

    Eric this is the first time I've watched your video. I watch Ray,s Repairs and I saw how fantastic it is that you and Ray are helping out the family with the Chrysler van blown engine. It's really nice of you both to lend a helping hand to a family that is going through such a hard time. Thank you for being so kind with your time and donating a engine to the cause. Bless you and Ray

  • @vuiceman
    @vuiceman23 күн бұрын

    Omg! Yes!!!! I actually have this engine in my SQ5 and cannot wait to watch this video! Well, 2 minutes in and no, no one has tuned them to 450/600 with just a simple flash tune… Nope no one ever

  • @rleger123

    @rleger123

    23 күн бұрын

    Have a SQ5, should I be nervous now?

  • @HappyHarryHardon

    @HappyHarryHardon

    23 күн бұрын

    @@rleger123have you turned yours up?

  • @raoulrr

    @raoulrr

    23 күн бұрын

    I think a flash tune might've been the reason for the warranty denial. Also the case of failure if it was a particularly aggressive tune, putting a ton more boost without the proper supporting mods (upgraded intercooler, radiator etc.) will mean a lot more heat, so heads start warping and more boost will 'help' compression go past the head gaskets.

  • @JohnSmith-pl2bk

    @JohnSmith-pl2bk

    23 күн бұрын

    @@raoulrr Don't forget the "hot V"....all that heat going out into the V... oh wait..... that's the 'side" of the head/block that got really really hot right where the unitary exhaust goes out to the turbo?

  • @TheMiseryIndex

    @TheMiseryIndex

    23 күн бұрын

    Do an oil change 😂😂

  • @notsouninterested
    @notsouninterested23 күн бұрын

    I work with these just about every day. Oil filter housings, PCV's, water pumps and thermostats, that valve that brings vacuum to the water pump, oil strainers, turbos, timing covers... I uhhh... Yeet. But thanks for the teardown as always! To anybody that has this engine, the code is CWGD, 8.0 qts. of 0W-20 (T40718 dipstick tool 76 0 14 or 16), 12-point spark plugs that are a 14mm, and these engines are in way too many of our cars. Water pumps are a pain because #serviceposition.

  • @painmagnet1
    @painmagnet123 күн бұрын

    Makes me wonder if the dealer didn't pull the computer's logs and see a flash tune. Instant warranty denial.

  • @schmo7777

    @schmo7777

    20 күн бұрын

    Easy and likely. Better to under run an engine than blow it. They ain't cheap!

  • @dontimlin4506

    @dontimlin4506

    18 күн бұрын

    Only at first - the burden is still on Audi at that point to prove that the tune caused the damage or failure. A smart customer that now has breakdown evidence could go back and fight this one. This is a clear fault failure there was no damage or evidence to show that any modifications could have caused this damage.

  • @hunterlacy2320

    @hunterlacy2320

    17 күн бұрын

    @@dontimlin4506 I wish thats how it was but its not unfortunately. Most euro brands void the warranty the moment you scan a car that has a tune. As a former BMW tech at a dealer, the moment I hooked a car up with a tune, that was it, the files are remotely uploaded to BMWs server and a record is kept. Once you tune a BMW its recorded forever in the ECMs programming data

  • @melissasmess2773

    @melissasmess2773

    17 күн бұрын

    That's what happened!

  • @justalex6301

    @justalex6301

    14 күн бұрын

    Standard protocol is to scan vehicle to check for aftermarket tune. If the car isn't scanned warranty claim is automatically denied and dealership has to foot the bill.

  • @TheTriviumhead
    @TheTriviumhead23 күн бұрын

    It just kills me how people buy a brand new car, rag on it, tune it, and beat on it some more, (and its still in the break in period) and then imagine their surprise when it blows up. My first brand new car: 2023 Ford F150 5.0, for the first 2,000 miles, I babied it. I'm at 9,000 miles, 1 oil change in, about to do a 2nd oil change, still haven't tuned it or done any engine mods... Why? Because I like my warranty.

  • @wilson2455

    @wilson2455

    22 күн бұрын

    car could have been stolen then thrashed? Car thieves tend not to care if a coolant hose blows..

  • @paleghost

    @paleghost

    21 күн бұрын

    @@wilson2455 The insurance company would have totaled it, paid out to the owner and the car would be in COPART lot..

  • @sugarnads

    @sugarnads

    20 күн бұрын

    Yep. I have a kia cerato GT. Lotta guys do a flash tune, turn up the boost etc. As soon as they get the car new. Like you i like my 7 year new car warranty..

  • @russelbrown6275

    @russelbrown6275

    18 күн бұрын

    All of my new Ford trucks I have babies until 30k then all the mods come out and no problems.

  • @russelbrown6275

    @russelbrown6275

    18 күн бұрын

    ⁠police report would have been generated

  • @frankdudek6242
    @frankdudek624223 күн бұрын

    You are approaching owning Saturday evening the way the NFL owns Sundays

  • @rleger123

    @rleger123

    23 күн бұрын

    Cause Saturday night's the night I like Saturday night's alright alright alright

  • @Jihadbearzwithgunz

    @Jihadbearzwithgunz

    22 күн бұрын

    Even though the nfl is just sports entertainment now days everything planned like wwe and aew wrestling

  • @peacefrog0521

    @peacefrog0521

    22 күн бұрын

    @@Jihadbearzwithgunz Friday Night Smackdown…meet Saturday Night Teardown.

  • @sumners26red
    @sumners26red23 күн бұрын

    I requested this engine a while back and never thought you’d ever get one! How cool. Too bad the intakes and turbo didn’t come with.

  • @scottsmada5033
    @scottsmada503323 күн бұрын

    Love the channel Eric, keep the vids coming!

  • @maxhugen
    @maxhugen12 күн бұрын

    👍I can't believe I just sat through 49 minutes watching that! But I admired both the engineering of the engine, and the skill involved in pulling it apart - without busting everything up. Cool. 😎🇦🇺

  • @Jdmorris143
    @Jdmorris14323 күн бұрын

    I used to come here to learn about engine tear downs. I now come here to see what you do with the chain tensioners. This time was 10 out of 10!

  • @rainmant5724
    @rainmant572423 күн бұрын

    Neat! Thank you for this tear down. Not everyday you get a brand new one to disassemble and see the latest technology/design.

  • @AS-fm6iw
    @AS-fm6iw23 күн бұрын

    I worked on a vw 10+ years ago and told myself ill never buy anything vw again and dont regret it to this day

  • @allanhope7018

    @allanhope7018

    22 күн бұрын

    Great engineering is accomplishing complicated things done in simple ways. However, VW loves to do simple things in complicated ways. For absolutely no reason. They even do stupid things like make the flywheel bolt holes all the way through the crank shaft so if you don't make sure to seal the bolts completely all the way around with thread locker your actual crank shaft will leak oil and fling it all over your new clutch so that gets destroyed for no reason as well.

  • @dsmith5822

    @dsmith5822

    21 күн бұрын

    The right way, the wrong way, and the German way.

  • @BenState

    @BenState

    19 күн бұрын

    They're fine if you follow Elsawin, keep the oil changes. Pretty basic really. Worked on multiple engines over a period of 15 years. My wifes Octavia has 160K miles, still runs like new due to the fact that I have kept the maintenance up. Only thing replaced was battery and water pump.

  • @user-rv5tw2nw7f

    @user-rv5tw2nw7f

    18 күн бұрын

    My daily is a '68 beetle. Awesome car, super easy and cheap to work on. Pretty much have done everything which isn't saying much, there really isn't anything to do. Can say I can pull the engine and put it back in, in less time than it takes to change and bleed the brake master cylinder. Geez what a PITA. I know you weren't going all the way back to the date with your comment, but if you want a solid, easy car to maintain, those fit the bill.

  • @AS-fm6iw

    @AS-fm6iw

    17 күн бұрын

    @@user-rv5tw2nw7f old German tech is amazing its all the newer things that went down a steep hill. I recently had a 1992 mercedes 420 and it was a tank with 180k miles all original and running like new

  • @m4rvelous23
    @m4rvelous2314 күн бұрын

    Love tuning in to 45 minutes of a sarcastic mechanic. Brightens my day!

  • @krevo6c
    @krevo6c23 күн бұрын

    2.45am in Germany 🇩🇪. Perfect time to watch a new Taredown 😎.

  • @reubensandwich9249

    @reubensandwich9249

    23 күн бұрын

    Perfrct time, perfect engine

  • @randomsomeguy156

    @randomsomeguy156

    23 күн бұрын

    In the event you don't know the correct spelling is "teardown" I just wanted to leave this comment

  • @09corvettezr1
    @09corvettezr123 күн бұрын

    Worth mentioning Eric that the balance shaft is spun by that idler gear above the back of the crankshaft, which clearly has a built in counter weight, to oppose the counter weight at the front of the engine.

  • @mikewhitley1183
    @mikewhitley118323 күн бұрын

    I want to thank you for what you and Rain Man Ray are doing as a team. You guys pay it forward that's amazing what a kind heart you guys have, God bless you both

  • @user-jn4vp8ub6n
    @user-jn4vp8ub6n20 күн бұрын

    Double awesome on you for donating the 3.6 and antilock module to help deserving folks. Something that may seem relatively simple and easy to you will be a kindness remembered by many, many people for a long time. Oh, and your videos are wicked cool, too.

  • @18Macallan
    @18Macallan23 күн бұрын

    Thank you Eric!👍

  • @bassmanbn
    @bassmanbn23 күн бұрын

    Oh my goodness, the engine puke at 35.50 is a thing for horror movies. LOL. Great teardown this week.

  • @Trendyflute

    @Trendyflute

    21 күн бұрын

    I was just a few bites into my dinner when that happened and it nearly put me off my whole meal!!

  • @bobcarry4820
    @bobcarry482018 күн бұрын

    Had a 70's Datsun 2 ltr 4 cyl truck. Blew a heater hose on the way to work and continued my trip (3 miles). I watch heat gauge and it stayed in the safe zone. Problem is gauge sender is in the block and the head didn't have coolant. Relatively easy to pull head, get it planed and re-installed but a lesson that cost. Thanks for sharing video.

  • @jeffsmith846
    @jeffsmith84622 күн бұрын

    I recently tore down a 430 MEL (mercury Edsel Lincoln) 430 engine out of my 1961 Lincoln. I bought it out of upstate NY and it had not run since 1977. Additionally, the vapor screen for the PCV valve was totally blocked, likely never cleaned in its 56000 miles. It was disgustingly filthy inside. Also, the evolution of the auto engine from 1961 (designed in mid 1950s) to this Audi engine is absolutely unbelievable. Thanks for posting.

  • @Toll_Booth_Willie
    @Toll_Booth_Willie23 күн бұрын

    You know there’s a german engineer watching this yelling nine ! Nine! Not that way!

  • @andrewstewart2741

    @andrewstewart2741

    23 күн бұрын

    Oh mein lieber Schweinehund, du hast keinen Respekt vor feinster deutscher Technik! Das war mein bester Entwurf.

  • @GSSurry

    @GSSurry

    23 күн бұрын

    Correction NEIN

  • @dbcooper4375

    @dbcooper4375

    23 күн бұрын

    I'm picturing one of those "Hitler finds out" clips

  • @theboz1419

    @theboz1419

    23 күн бұрын

    It's Nein, Nein, Nein, lol

  • @nissan300ztt

    @nissan300ztt

    23 күн бұрын

    Remember if its German Engineers its over engineered garbage! Just look at German tanks in WW2. Yeah they were awesome, when they werent broke down. German tanks werent designed to be field repaired. Shermans were.

  • @wwjoshdew
    @wwjoshdew23 күн бұрын

    43:40 I freaking SNORTED. Loudly. Then rewound, to hear it again. Love your channel bro.

  • @thecatofnineswords

    @thecatofnineswords

    23 күн бұрын

    I expect boring jokes from the machinists, not the mechanics

  • @derekstocker6661
    @derekstocker66617 күн бұрын

    Fascinating tear down, more than impressed with your knowledge and ability to pull these mills apart. Great respect and so damned sad for the owner of the car and the expense they must have had. Well done and keep up the amazing work!

  • @Dilberto88
    @Dilberto8820 күн бұрын

    Eric, that was therapeutic. Thanks!

  • @strokermaverick
    @strokermaverick23 күн бұрын

    Love to see, machine shop diagnosis of warpage, on heads, block, valve covers and cylinder bore.

  • @ryantornai945
    @ryantornai94523 күн бұрын

    I really thought you were gonna leave those guides alone lol

  • @09corvettezr1
    @09corvettezr122 күн бұрын

    Funny Eric that you chose this engine this weekend as it seems it was nearly defective out of the box, just like the new GM fuel pump my coworker bought for his 07 Sierra 1500, which I spent my Saturday helping him install. His old fuel pump still worked but there was this strange wetness and fuel smell from the top of the old pump😉. After we dealt with all rusty straps, removed the fuel line from the old pump and got it all back in the truck we found that when you cycle the key the new pump would only pump for about two seconds and no fuel was getting to the engine. We tried plugging in the old pump (which the truck drove in with, and was now oddly missing its fuel outlet fitting) to see if it powered up any differently, it didn’t. We looked for bent pins on connectors, plugged evap lines, etc, before finally dropping the tank again and comparing the pumps, we couldn’t spot any differences between them. It wasn’t until we tried powering up both pumps, while only partially submerged in gas, that we found the problem. The old pump would push fuel out of the broken(and slightly brown) outlet, the new pump was just splashing fuel around inside the lower housing that surrounds the actual pump. This pointed us towards the actual problem with the new GM pump. The actual fuel pump had a broken outlet where it connected to the rest of the plastic pump housing, and was just pumping fuel back into the tank. After a few deals were made over the phone between my coworker and the GM dealer we installed the old pump in the new housing and the truck ran fine.

  • @sylvainst-laurent3631
    @sylvainst-laurent363115 күн бұрын

    Thanks for the break down. I learned a few things .

  • @user-lr3rn9oi5n
    @user-lr3rn9oi5n23 күн бұрын

    Lemon Jam on the top end...I lost it!

  • @brettster3331
    @brettster333123 күн бұрын

    Hi Eric, this is so exciting to see, the way the camshafts are mounted etc. I would really like to hear the story on this engine.

  • 9 күн бұрын

    Very very beautifully built engine. I enjoyed every second!

  • @patrickgroebner1909
    @patrickgroebner19094 күн бұрын

    I have a 2021 Porsche Macan GTS with a some kind of Audi turbo V6. A couple of months ago I picked a rock that smacked the radiator and broke a coolant line. As soon as I noticed warnings and fume coming out from the hood I stopped and had the car towed in. Lucky nothing bad happened, the radiator was replaced and all is good. And it wasn't covered under warranty just like this guy but my comprehensive part less deductible covered the repair. In these modern high performance cars you have to take fluid leaks seriously.

  • @claudgurr431
    @claudgurr43123 күн бұрын

    The more I watch modern engines being torn down, the more I love my Buick 3800.

  • @TheInsultInvestor

    @TheInsultInvestor

    23 күн бұрын

    ok external pil pump boy

  • @knight2425

    @knight2425

    23 күн бұрын

    And then we drive a modern day car and hate the Buick 😂😂😂

  • @melissasmess2773

    @melissasmess2773

    17 күн бұрын

    I got the Oldsmobile 3.5, most powerful engine used in a W chassis. Very good engine.

  • @skeetrix5577

    @skeetrix5577

    17 күн бұрын

    man, I had the 3800 in my first car, a 06 regal. the fucking car fell apart around me, but I was able to drive it to the junkyard under its own power and even the day she went had just as powerful of a motor as ever. I had just hydroplaned into the wall on the highway and fucked the front end, so it was toast even though I still drive it with no front bumper and a bent bumper bar and missing a headlight for 4 or 5 months after that. lol. good times being 16 years old. but that 3800 will always hold a special place in my heart

  • @cc9z
    @cc9z23 күн бұрын

    the days of telling your 16 year old son go fix his car is over

  • @scottgreenway9963

    @scottgreenway9963

    23 күн бұрын

    My 16 year old son's first car would never have been an Audi. It would have been with money he earned.

  • @nissan300ztt

    @nissan300ztt

    23 күн бұрын

    Only if you buy modern. My friend Sam and I can swap out an LS motor from a silverado in 2 hours flat if we wanted. Weve done an LS swap with 4 guys in about 40 minutes. Modern engines are overly complex with BS valve timing. Its all a gimmick.

  • @styx85

    @styx85

    23 күн бұрын

    You don't have to buy your 16 year old son a brand new Audi S5 you know.

  • @Large_Sarge

    @Large_Sarge

    23 күн бұрын

    If you look at the used car market, prices or skyrocketing. I know this has a lot of factors including the economy. Yet, you're going to start seeing more more people keeping older vehicles going. I have a 2005 Yukon that I just put a 60,000 mi 5'3 in. I'm slowly repairing everything on it because they just don't make them like that anymore. I'm sure every generation says this though so I guess we'll see.

  • @TheUweRoss

    @TheUweRoss

    23 күн бұрын

    @@nissan300ztt It's been forced on the manufacturers by emissions & fuel economy regulations.

  • @The_DuMont_Network
    @The_DuMont_Network23 күн бұрын

    Rainman Ray sent me here. Subscribed. Good thing to day is a Rainy Day, 'cause I'll be binge watching.

  • @targetspecies
    @targetspecies22 күн бұрын

    Referred to your site due to the project you’re working on with Ray. Subbed and looking forward to more tear-down / repair vids. Thanks.

  • @mydimeisup5103
    @mydimeisup510323 күн бұрын

    Nice! I think I saw an EA837 Supercharged 3.0T from Audi in the background. Would love to see that teardown!

  • @I_Do_Cars

    @I_Do_Cars

    23 күн бұрын

    I promise, one of the three of those that came in will be on the channel soon

  • @harrywalker968

    @harrywalker968

    21 күн бұрын

    @@I_Do_Cars 2.0 pt pinto. we would mount them by the engine mount. so we could build the whole engine. HINT. make a brkt..pivoting..

  • @harrywalker968

    @harrywalker968

    21 күн бұрын

    @@I_Do_Cars big ends. proly need a diff spreader, ish..

  • @grantsdad98
    @grantsdad9823 күн бұрын

    I suspect the main bearing caps were installed cryogenically. Freeze the caps to a shrinking point, install. At room temperature, they'll fit snuggly.

  • @Greatdome99

    @Greatdome99

    23 күн бұрын

    Called an 'interference fit.' At room temperature the bearing caps are actually larger than the block. Also used to install bearings on shafts so they stay tight.

  • @MrSnoots
    @MrSnoots13 күн бұрын

    Just bought a souvenir from this one! Something to remind me to take care of my 2024 EA839

  • @mikeh6876
    @mikeh687623 күн бұрын

    Great video ... looking forward to your confab with Ray on the pay-it-forward engine.

  • @aeroman5239
    @aeroman523923 күн бұрын

    How about a collaboration with @VAG Technic? Just box up the parts and send it to them for a rebuild. It seems they are always tearing-down engines, and this one would a good replacement for anyone that has blown up a 2017+ 3.0 TFSI.

  • @johnmay4803
    @johnmay480323 күн бұрын

    another good vid pal

  • @waltersaunders7699
    @waltersaunders769921 күн бұрын

    I've come across from Rainman Ray's channel following your, Van Plan, to help the family. Great video about engineers going sick with engine design. Thanks from Aus

  • @mikejba
    @mikejba22 күн бұрын

    "Lemon Jam" is my phrase of the week. Thanks Eric!

  • @MadScientistsLair
    @MadScientistsLair23 күн бұрын

    So I have a 2018 S5 coupe using this same engine; the only major difference is the smaller needle bearings on the roller rockers pre-2020 which have caused some failures. From what I can tell, it's not as widespread as the forums would have you believe and even those engines are pretty solid. The Audi Valvelift System is really cool and allows the engine in low demand situations to run as a Miller cycle engine, resulting in shockingly good fuel economy, and it does so in a way that's quite a lot simpler than VANOS. Seeing this video really made me appreciate just how elegant the system is. Assuming I can keep my right foot light, which is a big ask on open stretches of lonely highway, I can get upwards of 33MPG highway with this thing. My record is 34MPG but that was in a construction zone heavy area so I basically had to hyper mile it anyway. I have 86K miles on mine so far; let's discuss the failures. One slightly noisy strut, one oil cooler with a slow leak and some speaker grill rattles were fixed under the CPO warranty. An engine mount, driver's window regulator, one wheel bearing and some misc suspension bushings were replaced under the extended service contract at 84K. It's no 1999 Camry, but for a fun car, it hasn't been too hard to keep. (The 1999 Camry is indeed what I drive when this thing is in the shop. It's as reliable as a Panasonic AM radio but about as entertaining.) These engines call for a specific oil spec, VW 508 00. Use ONLY oils meeting this spec or you'll be very, very sad when the bill comes. More on that here: ato24.de/en/blog/comparison-0w-20-engine-oils/ The coating on the bearings is likely to prevent excessive wear with the start-stop system. I use it only in moderate city traffic and turn it off in stop and go jams. It dramatically improves city economy when used in moderate city traffic where stops are due to lights (about 4MPG!) but it's annoying and will probably cause excessive wear in traffic jam situations where you only stay stationary for a few seconds at a time. The fuel savings in frequent low speed stop and go scenarios appear to be extremely small; I usually see about a 1mpg improvement in my morning North Dallas Tollway commute unless there's a big wreck, and I'm stopped longer. (of course, at that point, you can probably just put it in park!) As for the coolant loss, Audis will make a hell of a ruckus and practically take over the instrument panel with warnings should a critical failure occur that requires the driver to stop. Even when a relatively minor thing happens such as a TPMS warning, it can be a bit of a diva with a warning that briefly consumes 1/3 of the virtual cockpit display and a loud tone. You'd have to be deaf and blind not to get the warning.

  • @tellyourmomisaidhi5804

    @tellyourmomisaidhi5804

    21 күн бұрын

    The comment about overtaking the gauge cluster for a simple warning is how all German companies do it. I work for a VW dealer in StL now and was working for a BMW dealer in the area for the last 3 years. I currently have a 2018 S4 running 034 stage 2 E85 tune. If something is not right, the Germans certainly tell you about it.

  • @drk.walters

    @drk.walters

    18 күн бұрын

    I’ve been having the VW 508.00 debate for a while about my 2018 S4. I’ve decided to try 504/507 0w-30 this summer for better protection in the heat. I’m doing 5k mileage intervals.

  • @drk.walters

    @drk.walters

    18 күн бұрын

    I bought the oil change kit for the RS equivalent, with the branded oil.

  • @teleguy5699

    @teleguy5699

    10 күн бұрын

    I always turn off my start stop. I'm retired so I don't care about gas mileage. I heard the main reason for that system is for emissions not so much fuel savings. No mater what I'm told, stopping and starting an engine multiple time per trip compared to once can't be good for the vehicle.

  • @S0SS0L
    @S0SS0L23 күн бұрын

    MSRP was $56,395 to $64,495 for the coupe and $64,495 to $72,595 for the convertible. A bill for half the price of the car seems like a replace-the-car scenario to me.

  • @richardcherico2434

    @richardcherico2434

    21 күн бұрын

    That works if you don't have a note on it.

  • @paleghost

    @paleghost

    21 күн бұрын

    Close call. Buy a new one or lightly used one and part out the old one. Hopefully a specialist salvage yard would pay decent money for it.

  • @antcantcook960

    @antcantcook960

    20 күн бұрын

    “the car still had temp tags on it”

  • @francisdoran971

    @francisdoran971

    20 күн бұрын

    I'm laughing because all the EV haters keep going on about the price of a replacement high voltage battery writing off the car. ICE engines are just as bad.

  • @user-wm3fc1sk1p

    @user-wm3fc1sk1p

    19 күн бұрын

    I would never understand why anyone would do that. At that point I'd just go ls1 swap for a small fraction of the cost

  • @mikecumbo7531
    @mikecumbo753122 күн бұрын

    Eric, you and Ray are both class acts.

  • @henrybobswillikers
    @henrybobswillikers23 күн бұрын

    Been catching up on your vids. You deserve more subs.

  • @MDBenson
    @MDBenson23 күн бұрын

    Eric... Eric... how many times have you drained an engine because you didn't want to turn it upside down with all that in it and make a mess. And here you are proving yourself 100% correct. 😂😂 Thanks for the video, this was a fascinating look into modern engine design. Even the Main caps were lightened. A lot of people will probably have bad things to say about modern VWAG cars and engines but the quality of the parts in that engine were really apparent. Unfortunately, you probably can't see any of it when it's in the car as it's buried under 8 miles of hoses and wiring.

  • @Ponykotze
    @Ponykotze23 күн бұрын

    As a German, I don’t understand at all people buying VW/Audi stuff.

  • @kevinc7632

    @kevinc7632

    23 күн бұрын

    fun to lease, do not ltrust lol

  • @Supremxcyxi

    @Supremxcyxi

    23 күн бұрын

    The EA839 is a great engine. This engine likely blew up due to user error hence why the warranty was voided. Can’t fix stupid.

  • @azzaahhYT

    @azzaahhYT

    23 күн бұрын

    My GTI is a blast.

  • @Thegreendingler

    @Thegreendingler

    23 күн бұрын

    What brands do you like as a German?

  • @kenkozawa9810

    @kenkozawa9810

    23 күн бұрын

    Which is why at least in America they have struggled compared to nearly all other legacy automakers whether economy or luxury.. Personally wouldn't mind owning a manual R8 and VW XL1 but in general most of their products fail to interest me.

  • @mikecharlton5608
    @mikecharlton560823 күн бұрын

    THANKS FOR THE CONTENT> GOOD JOB

  • @jppagetoo
    @jppagetoo23 күн бұрын

    The castings on that engine are beautiful. Nice quality aluminum.

  • @Jakek200
    @Jakek20023 күн бұрын

    Those solenoids are for shiftable cams to use the different profiles. GM has been doing the same on their 2.0L "LSY" and the 2.7L "Turbomax" engines from 2019+ on both cams. There's a high lift, low lift, and no lift (AFM) profiles. I wonder if in time and high miles those sliding splines will start wearing out and cam lobes start binding when trying to shift. I guess time will tell. Also yes those 'cam carrier' gaskets do leak, the 2.0L engine specifically are notorious for it and require retiming the engine but the chain and cams are locked during the repair.

  • @tally5k339

    @tally5k339

    23 күн бұрын

    Audi's used this system (they call it AVS) on a few engines now, going back over a decade, and I haven't heard of it going bad. On my VW GTI's gen 3 EA888 specifically, the main issue is the VVT solenoids (not the lift ones) going bad from being run low on oil consistently

  • @ryandoyle4344

    @ryandoyle4344

    22 күн бұрын

    Should have a fail-safe, likely low lift, but today who knows, probably fails into afm!

  • @razter6678
    @razter667823 күн бұрын

    If I had to guess, they probably modded the engine in some way. VAG are very much sticklers about modding and warranties. You mod it, you void it. Could also be what caused the gasket failure.

  • @Confirm_selection

    @Confirm_selection

    23 күн бұрын

    Any dealer would deny if a tune shows up.

  • @greeneyesms

    @greeneyesms

    23 күн бұрын

    @@Confirm_selection I work for a Kia dealer. After the bad publicity from recent engine problems, Kia replaced an engine that was tuned, simply to avoid the arguments. We felt it was just encouraging bad behavior, but it wasn't our decision. We got the warranty income, of course.

  • @Rock-Bottem1982

    @Rock-Bottem1982

    22 күн бұрын

    Lmao. Kia is a far cry from Audi my friend. ​@@greeneyesms

  • @emmexfyv

    @emmexfyv

    17 күн бұрын

    @@greeneyesms The 2.4L n/a engines are the crappy ones. No chance someone tried tuning one of those--

  • @Francis.....
    @Francis.....23 күн бұрын

    I just watched RRR video, You are a good man Eric.

  • @WalkiTalki
    @WalkiTalki23 күн бұрын

    I had an 01 2.8ltr wagon that had 295K miles. I took it in for all oil changes and maintenance to the dealer I bought it from. They had these weird locking coolant hoses and at the last visit they didn't make sure to push the lower hose all the way on the radiator. After it stalled just a couple of blocks away, I had it towed back to the dealer. They refunded 200 of my 2500 dollar bill and told me I would have to sue to get the rest back because the car had so many miles that it wouldn't have run much longer anyway. The scrapper gave me another 250 for the car and Audi has lost a customer for life. These engines do not survive an overheat.

  • @TheOwlGuy777

    @TheOwlGuy777

    23 күн бұрын

    You SHOULD have sued them. Always call their bluff with three estimates higher than theirs plus legal expenses. They would have lost and you would have gotten paid.

  • @mattbergseid9196

    @mattbergseid9196

    18 күн бұрын

    Sounds like you blamed the manufacturer for the dealers mistake....

  • @rhyoliteaquacade

    @rhyoliteaquacade

    17 күн бұрын

    I would have sued. Why else would someone sink $2500 but to enjoy it another 50K miles.

  • @cameronworthington800
    @cameronworthington80023 күн бұрын

    As someone who drives a '96 Tacoma 2.4L 2wd I'm always looking for parts due to extreme rust. Though I love the fact that my grandpa, who had the truck before me, installed a supercharger kit on it. It is so much fun as I'm still continuing to add different things to it. I would love to see either of the two four cylinder (2.4 2rz-fe or 2.7 3rz-fe) 1st gen Tacoma engines torn down.

  • @ryandoyle4344

    @ryandoyle4344

    22 күн бұрын

    They're all still running

  • @BITTYBOY121
    @BITTYBOY12118 күн бұрын

    Must be a nightmare to replace the timing chains on one of these crazy engines !

  • @MasterVader512
    @MasterVader51223 күн бұрын

    I simply can not live without a video of yours in the weekend. I truly love your videos and have learned absolutely so much when it comes to engines. However, can you do more diesels? More Duramaxes, Cummins or Powerstrokes, and you're also for getting the old 6.2Land 6.5L Detroit Diesels.

  • @Bob_Adkins
    @Bob_Adkins2 күн бұрын

    In other parts of the world, this engine would have been fixed in 2-3 days without changing major parts and been as good as ever.

  • @brunonikodemski2420
    @brunonikodemski242021 күн бұрын

    As a GM engineer, this reminds me of the era when head gaskets were common failure points. GM spent millions trying to fix this with O-rings, glue, compressed metal, exotic materials, and other whatnots. When aluminum heads were mated to iron blocks, the problems got worse. I had a 240Z/280Z car with iron heads, iron block, where I got 230,000 miles out of a head gasket, before repair was needed. Eventually scrapped the car with about 666,000 miles on the block. Purchase cost of the car was 2400$usd. Saved me millions of dollars as compared to any Euro brand. Only GMC engines are as good.

  • @alro2434

    @alro2434

    21 күн бұрын

    240Z/280Z did NOT have an iron head! Typical GM engineer?????

  • @chuckz28
    @chuckz2823 күн бұрын

    Moral of the story. Dont mess with the tune, or boost if you cant afford to replace a 30k dollar engine.

  • @guthrie_1

    @guthrie_1

    17 күн бұрын

    Did he say the failure was a result of modification?

  • @hunterlacy2320

    @hunterlacy2320

    17 күн бұрын

    @@guthrie_1 as a euro tech, warranty kicked it for one of two reasons, one, the car overheated and the customer (ignoring warning lights) drove until the car shut off. or option two, it had an aftermarket tune on the car, either situation would have resulted in audi denying the warranty. saw it happen at bmw with a m340i with a stage one flash tune, car lost compression and bmw kicked the claim, customer paid out of pocket for repairs.

  • @ThorDyrden

    @ThorDyrden

    17 күн бұрын

    @@guthrie_1 in deed tuned turbo-pressure and messing with the ecu also was the first possible reason, which came to my mind seeing the damage and getting the fact, that warranty was denied.

  • @paulbruneau7379

    @paulbruneau7379

    15 күн бұрын

    @@guthrie_1 He said a coolant line burst that was unrelated to a manufacturing defect, so I'm going to go with "yes" unless a squirrel ate through it or something

  • @guthrie_1

    @guthrie_1

    15 күн бұрын

    @@paulbruneau7379 yeah I’m not aware of any bolt on modification that causes coolant lines to burst.

  • @dougaustintx
    @dougaustintx23 күн бұрын

    Eric.. love the teardown videos. Wondered what you use to clean the oil and other goop from your floor after the camera work is done?

  • @hartpa
    @hartpa5 күн бұрын

    So many names for the sludge lol... Nice video. Thanks.

  • @A.Mouse_1815
    @A.Mouse_181523 күн бұрын

    The non-magnetic bolts are made from Audiminium

  • @MiGujack3

    @MiGujack3

    23 күн бұрын

    Aka rebranded Chinesium

  • @nissan300ztt

    @nissan300ztt

    23 күн бұрын

    At $43 a bolt!

  • @CalculatedRiskAK
    @CalculatedRiskAK23 күн бұрын

    Honestly the cams/valve cover being an assembly is pretty neat.

  • @buttsexandbananapeels

    @buttsexandbananapeels

    23 күн бұрын

    Agreed. And then they put the timing system in the rear of the engine… Germans.

  • @salninethousand2496

    @salninethousand2496

    23 күн бұрын

    Especially no bearings - just using the cap and valve cover housings as the bearing material.

  • @1djbecker

    @1djbecker

    23 күн бұрын

    @@salninethousand2496 Bare aluminum used as cam bearings has been common for decades. It is reliable and long lasting as long as there is at least some oil flow and the oil is well filtered. Anything the oil will chew up the aluminum casting on the way through. The difference here is that the larger casting is used to resist the primary forces rather than cam caps. That might result in less flex, which could improve longevity, or a lighter assembly. There isn't any argument about wear on the more expensive larger casting vs cam caps. Cam carriers are line bored. Wearing out the bearing surface on either side means that the whole assembly is trash.

  • @802Garage

    @802Garage

    21 күн бұрын

    ​@@1djbeckerBut then you can replace just the carrier instead of the whole head.

  • @1djbecker

    @1djbecker

    21 күн бұрын

    @@802Garage There are plenty of engines where the cam carrier is not part of the head casting. The primary reason is usually machining geometry, but it allows using an alloy with improved wear resistance.

  • @user-fi3fx5my2s
    @user-fi3fx5my2s23 күн бұрын

    Can tell its newer, everything sealed up good. Think your money ahead on this one Eric.

  • @manuelclavijo4484
    @manuelclavijo448422 күн бұрын

    Hola , tus videos son muy instructivos , vivo en suiza soy mecánico amateur y siempre el mismo problema , no hay tiempo para buscar información y luego se pierde mucho tiempo buscando como desarmar cada parte ...

  • @jamesplotkin4674
    @jamesplotkin467423 күн бұрын

    Impressive rocker roller bearings. Looks like they'd survive a long time, but the best is still a bushing. Tell GM and Ram to up their game.

  • @Pat_Fenis69
    @Pat_Fenis6919 күн бұрын

    I’m a tech at Audi and we recently had an S5 in the shop (maybe like three months ago) anyways it had 1800 miles on it and had a bad knock. Low compression in like 4 and 5 or something. Metal in the oil filter. Anyways it was tuned so warranty was denied. I’m kind of wondering if this is the engine. Came from Raleigh, NC.

  • @arnoldtm31
    @arnoldtm3121 күн бұрын

    I bought the Audi A5 40 tdi quattro in 2021. My first and only brand new car. I intend to keep it for a long time. Just over 18.5k miles so far. No issues. Hope it stays that way.

  • @MikeHarris1984
    @MikeHarris198419 күн бұрын

    That is such a cool design where it has siliniods that slide a cam profile into place. Changing the performance

  • @MrNoneofthisisreal
    @MrNoneofthisisreal23 күн бұрын

    I knew I was outgunned when the service writer at the Porsche/Audi dealership made me feel inadequate for not paying $1,100 for an oil change! Thank you for listening. I feel better now. R

  • @azi6477

    @azi6477

    23 күн бұрын

    Learn how to do a service yourself. A complete service with oil + oil filter, air filter, fuel filter and cabin filter will cost about 450 to 500 on materials. Or find a good mechanic that will do it for a reasonable price. Even the reset after the service can be done without diagnostic tools moost time. These German cars (BMW, Audi, Porsche, Marceders) are critical for service because they have extreme tight tolerances and high power output to displacement. where you can be lazy with air, fuel and cabin filters your oil service should not be neglected, better to soon than to late. Also the engine must be used calmly until it is at temperature (90deg celsius) before you squeeze out all the power. If you do that your engine will not end up on this channel.

  • @Confirm_selection

    @Confirm_selection

    23 күн бұрын

    If you signed the estimate with "R" I'd overcharge you as well 😆

  • @jamesmedina2062

    @jamesmedina2062

    23 күн бұрын

    jeez what vehicle?

  • @bobcoats2708

    @bobcoats2708

    22 күн бұрын

    @@azi6477$500 worth of filters? Holy cow!

  • @rewing4880

    @rewing4880

    20 күн бұрын

    Just had a oil changed on my VW at Vavoline. Psst. the 1.8 TSI engine is the same engine as in an Audi TT. Cost $125 which I thought was high. Only thing I get VW to service is Trans fluid changes. Last one I had done cost about $240. Valvoline don't drop the drain plug to drain the oil, , they suck the oil out of the dip stick tube. At least they don't forget to tighten the drain plug that way. Cheers.

  • @amblyo2706
    @amblyo270623 күн бұрын

    speaking on mounting the engine to a stand, all cwgd engines taken out are normally held on with chains on an engine hoist. That is the purpose of the black hook receivers on the heads, and is what is used at my dealership. Thank you for the great content and tearing down of this audi engine, I normally see these having sparkles in the oil as little as 5k miles so sooner or later I hoped to see you tear one down.

  • @jaredbawden6707

    @jaredbawden6707

    23 күн бұрын

    You don't really want to be half pulling apart an engine on a hoist, though. That's asking for trouble.

  • @PaulLorenzini-ny2yw

    @PaulLorenzini-ny2yw

    23 күн бұрын

    Terribly sorry to hear you have to fix things like that.

  • @patrickkennedy2533
    @patrickkennedy253319 күн бұрын

    watching you take this engine apart makes me want one of these cars now .

  • @teleguy5699

    @teleguy5699

    10 күн бұрын

    An S4 or 5 is a beast.

  • @mediocreman2
    @mediocreman223 күн бұрын

    Wow, that's a very impressive engine! I've heard they are reliable, but seeing the design, I can understand a bit better why they are good. Obviously the owner bought a bad tune. And of course the tuner will take no responsibility for blowing the engine.

  • @richm896
    @richm89620 күн бұрын

    "Oh your valve cover is leaking..... We would need to pull the engine because the transmission is in the way of the timing chain that's connected to the cams that are encased in the valve cover.... $7,000 please." .

  • @Hopalong..75
    @Hopalong..7523 күн бұрын

    Interesting tear down.

  • @artblackwood7936
    @artblackwood793623 күн бұрын

    That looks like a well engineered engine.

Келесі