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#1
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No it is completely possible to replace the t-stat by just moving the belt off the left cam "facing car" sprocket enough to unbolt the thermostat housing and replace the t-stat. I have done this twice successfully.
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2003 A8L Build Thread D3 Turbine Reps – S8 Mani 2002 Allroad Build Thread 2005 Color Match - TDI 01E - TTV LWFW - RS4 PP - BW K04s - Stg 2 WMI - WB- AWE DTS - EFK - H-SPORTS - IPP Arms - S6 Alcantaras - 4K LB Hitch - V1 |
#2
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That's near enough removed though really if you're thinking in labour bill terms, assuming you're paying somebody else to do it? To get to that point must involve a fair bit of dismantling....
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===SOLD===2002 Audi S8 D2 Final Edition (yes, really) in Avus Silver with purple extended leather===SOLD=== 2011 S5 Sportback in Phantom Black with black Super Sports leather, 9x20s, tech pack high, adaptive xenon plus, intelligent key, memory seats pack, sunroof, B&O, Audi Drive Select & quattro Sports Diff, DAB, parking system plus 2015 VW Golf GTI Performance Pack in Carbon Grey with black Vienna leather, tech pack (Discovery Pro nav & Dynaudio), DCC, factory towbar and retrofit RVC |
#3
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With labor here at local shops running £100 per hour and Audi £160 per hour, i do all the maintenance my self ![]() Just finished a total overhaul of brakes,calipers, rear dif, control arms, gearbox filter & oil, inner/outer tie-rod, and so much more back in August so was hoping for a long break now ![]()
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2003 Daytona Grey RS6 2000 Silver S8 2005 A6 1.8TQ Premium 1993 Audi S4 2.2 TQ MTM 330 (my first love!) |
#4
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Update.
Just removed all covers and trying to figure a solution to gain access to the thermostat without removing the tb. First off, after watching a clip on youtube were the guy states there is a certain point(when turning the engine) that gives the tb less tention, I started turning to find this spot. However that came after 1/15 turn on the crank, and that seemed fine enough intill i cobtinued to turn and for what seems like every 1/8 turns it keeps changing between loose and sick tight. At the same time the waterpump wheel is not moving everytime i hit one of those loose spots.... So: -Does this manual turning reflect how the tb is actually tentioned when engine is running? or will it for some strange reason be more tentioned ? -anyone manually turned their FL S8 and have comparrison? -Should i just continue and do the thermostat or should this loose/tight be investigated further? Any suggestions would be appreciated ![]()
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2003 Daytona Grey RS6 2000 Silver S8 2005 A6 1.8TQ Premium 1993 Audi S4 2.2 TQ MTM 330 (my first love!) |
#5
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Well... That seems to be it..
As mentioned above i have only handcranked the engine to find the socalled loose spot.. After last post i stupidly started the engine with the idea of monitoring the waterpump, however just as it started it sounded immediatly like the tb was a couple of tooth off.. (loud valve sound) It ran maybe dor 1 sec max before i turned it off.... As f now the tb is tight all over but i'm afraid there might be some bent valves.. Is there any way to check timing without the cam-locking metal tool? I need a beer..
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2003 Daytona Grey RS6 2000 Silver S8 2005 A6 1.8TQ Premium 1993 Audi S4 2.2 TQ MTM 330 (my first love!) |
#6
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Mine had the belt just flapping about because of the failed tensioner and doesn't *appear* to have bent any valves (no visible marks on the pistons). Could yours have just been chain tensioner noise?
I have a brand new engine waiting to go back in mine - I will check how the belt behaves on that and report back. I'll not get to it until Tuesday though. You can visually check the timing to see if it's close. Turn the crank so that the notch in the pulley lines up with the mark on the lower belt cover (about 1 o'clock). The four holes on the cam shafts should all be horizontal - measure with a straight edge, or even a bit of string. Obviously you can't set it like that, but you can tell if its wrong. I can see the argument for the belt going slack - the roller cam followers allow the cams to jump around when they are coming off the lobe, compared to tappets which don't behave like that. As the cam jumps round it could pull the belt tight in places and loose in others. Turned by hand the tensioner may not be able to accommodate this. If it does behave thus, I can't see how it could possibly do that with the engine running without tearing itself to bits. Rotating inertia, oil pressure, etc should see to it running smoothly. Of course all of this is conjecture until either I have a look at my factory engine or an expert chimes in! I would not claim to be an expert on the 40V. |
#7
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Appreciate the info
![]() Removing the sparkplugs today and having a look at the pistons with a boreoscope. Should be som traces if the valves hit the pistons i would assume.. I can still manually turn it without feeling any interference between pistons and valves. As for the timing i did set the crank to the position and the cams look pretty much in level(facing ditectly towards each other) The car is jacked up pretty high on jackstands,(car sits in a steep angle) wondering if that may have caused the oil usually left in the heads to return to then pan and this causing more chain rattle at startup then normal(when cold) All this might give me a reason to buy a D3 ![]()
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2003 Daytona Grey RS6 2000 Silver S8 2005 A6 1.8TQ Premium 1993 Audi S4 2.2 TQ MTM 330 (my first love!) |
#8
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Crank at TDC
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2003 Daytona Grey RS6 2000 Silver S8 2005 A6 1.8TQ Premium 1993 Audi S4 2.2 TQ MTM 330 (my first love!) |
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