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2006 Audi A4 TDI Avant cuts out at WOT uphill

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  • #549591
    firewalkfirewalk
    Participant

      So I just bought a 2006 Audi A4 TDI. My very first Audi and it wouldn’t be long until I noticed that this car has a mind of it’s own. Every time I go WOT (wide open throtle) upphill it cuts out.

      The previous owner had the same problem and he had the car at various workshops but none of them managed to fix the problem.

      What happens is that when I put down the gas pedal going uphill it will accelrate for a few seconds, then I loose all power as the car goes into “limp mode”. If I cycle the ignition off and on again it’s back to normal, as long as I don’t floor it again.. This only happens going uphill! I can floor it going stright in every gear, no problem, it’s just going uphill!

      I got my hands on a laptop and a vagcom cable and red the stored fault code. It sais: Overboost condition – intermitent.

      The car is fully oem. I’ve googled this and I see that many has the same problem with the car cutting out due to “overboost condition”, but noone seems to have the exact same problem that I’m having, with me it’s just going uphill, which is kind of weird because the engine is under 100% load with max boost going stright also, so why will it cut out only going uphill?

      The things I’ve searched and found as possble faults is:

      Vacuum leak
      N75 valve (regulating vacuum to the turbo actuator)
      Variable vanes inside turbo stuck
      AFM

      But none of this makes any sence with my problem. If there was a turbo regulating issue, why does it only happen uphill and not when I floor it going stright? The turbo spools up and the car produces power just fine!
      If it was a vacuum leak, still, I should think it would happen more often, not just uphill?

      It’s just every time i go uphill this happends.. and that sadly is every day, because I have to travel trough an undersea tunnel with a 7% incline uphill :unsure:

      I can avoid it by not pushing the pedal down fully, not allowing the turbo to peak boost. This is the newest car I’ve ever had and I’ve been saving up for a long time to get it. So this problem is not any fun at all :unsure:

      Has anyone ever heared of something like this?

    Viewing 12 replies - 1 through 12 (of 12 total)
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    • #549765
      college mancollege man
      Moderator

        I take it the code you got was p0234? The turbo is over
        boosting and the car is going into limp mode to save the
        motor.when you cycle the key your resetting the problem.
        why this happens on a hill only.That I can’t answer.If I’m
        honest.You may have stuck/dirty turbo vanes.

        http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uK9dFNS-ddM

        http://www.myturbodiesel.com/1000q/a4/VNT-wastegate-adjust.htm

        #549771
        firewalkfirewalk
        Participant

          Thanks allot! I’ll definately be checking this out first thing in the morning! :cheer:

          #549774
          college mancollege man
          Moderator

            You are welcome. keep us posted on your progress. 🙂

            #549790
            BillBill
            Participant

              I agree ++++1 with college man.

              #550526
              EricTheCarGuy 1EricTheCarGuy
              Keymaster

                That is an interesting problem and I think College man might be onto something. One thing that came to my mind was a fuel delivery issue. When going uphill and accelerating the fuel moves to the back of the tank. At that time if things aren’t positioned in the tank correctly, or the baffles have come loose, this will starve the pump for fuel. It’s a long shot I know but if you don’t get any traction with the College man theory you might look into that possibility. To be honest I’m not sure why that condition would set an over boost code either. It’s just a thought I had based on your description.

                Keep us posted on your progress.

                #552157
                firewalkfirewalk
                Participant

                  I did what the video told me. But I imediately noticed that in my case the rod is able to move all the way, there is no sticking in my case. I still used a long screwdriver pushing it up just to be sure, but when I enabled and disabled vacuum to the actuator it moved all the way, so It must be something else causing it. :

                  I thought about a fuel issue too, but I just can’t get my head arround why it would throw a overboost code.. It don’t make any sense.. 🙁

                  #552161
                  college mancollege man
                  Moderator
                    #552334
                    firewalkfirewalk
                    Participant

                      Thanks again!

                      I’ve been reding and reading. This is heavy stuff. Seems there is allot of stuff that can cause this, and allot of possible causes. I feel like I’m studdying for an exam, there’s just so much to get into and understand in order to properly diagnose this issue.

                      Anyways, After reading for hours, I think in my case the most likely scanario is a vacuum leak, causing the actuator rod to move to slow, causing the ecu to trigger limp mode. I’ve watched videos of the actuator moving, and allthough mine has perfect travel, it do seem to move a little slower than the ones I’ve seen on youtube.

                      I have ordered a vacuum tester from ebay, I see the rod should move to the fully extended position at 18 hg, but that 25 hg is what’s “normal” for the engine to produce.

                      I will attach my test instrument in between the line to the actuator itself, to confirm that the vacuum is as it should.

                      If it’s not, I foundn this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9CPqbaSgcok

                      But all my vacuum lines are covered with some plastic wrapping, so I don’t think this technique will work on this car. Any other way to find a potential leaks?

                      I was thinking of hooking up my air compressor, aplying pressure and listening for leaks with the engine off, but several one way valves would probably make that difficult. unless I check at many different locations. `?

                      #552352
                      college mancollege man
                      Moderator

                        I would not use compressed air. you may damage more than do good.
                        Eric’s method will work even with wrapped lines.You could use a spray
                        bottle with water and spray the lines or get a cigar and try this method.

                        #553768
                        EricTheCarGuy 1EricTheCarGuy
                        Keymaster

                          You can also use water in a spray bottle instead of carburetor cleaner. Vacuum leaks on a turbo engine are a bit different however. Instead of vacuum in the intake you sometimes have pressure which can make finding leaks difficult. You might also try looking up the troubleshooting for the code you have.

                          #553963
                          firewalkfirewalk
                          Participant

                            Eric:

                            I was looking to understand how the wastegate actuator works on theese cars, compared to ordinary petrol cars where there is a spring loaded wastegate that opens at a given pressure (this is a tdi). On this car it seems to be the other way arround, the way I have understood it then the spring keeps the wastegate / variable wanes closed and when vacuum is aplied trough the n95 valve (solenoid) it opens. So it opens on vacuum and not by positive pressure.

                            There is a vacuum reservior, and I think there is a vacuum pump as well somewhere, but I havent found it yet.

                            But if there is a vacuum pump that operates this system, then theese methods won’t work since the air isn’t ending up in the engine right? So how can I troubleshoot it then?

                            #555555
                            EricTheCarGuy 1EricTheCarGuy
                            Keymaster

                              Honestly you’re in deep water with this one. I’m not familiar with that set up at all. As for waste gates, they can be activated in a number of ways as you have found. You might do well to track down a service manual at this point. All the testing information you would need would be in there.

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