Audi TT Forum banner
61 - 80 of 103 Posts
Well, after a week or so of trying different tools and methods....... I've given up!

I've put the car back together tonight and I guess I'll have to try and find a local garage to get those bloody bolts off. I've done a great job of rounding them off now too. :(
 
Update for anyone interested....

Took it to a welder and car breaker, stripped it and he tried to weld nuts on to the existing bolts, no joy. The weld wouldn't take or something. Called 3 local garages, 2 said they won't do the job if the bolts are stripped, ÂŁ800 quote from another garage.

I literally don't know what to do with the thing now! Freaking nightmare. Can anyone recommend trying to drill the bolts out, and how exactly you do that?!!!
 
I would try to see if you have an engineering (ideally automotive engineering) business locally. The sort that would work on commercial stuff as well - normally bearing replacements on shafts etc. My experience is that they will be used to this kind of task - worse case they'll bore it out and re thread.
 
This was a job I tackled at the end of last year, exactly the same issues as you but didn't try the welding bolts etc. I used a local automotive engineering company in the end and it took them a couple of hours to sort fully but well worth it

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
I am half way through doing this job. I noticed in the picture there are no washers on the bolts. Is this correct? As I have I normal bolt no washer and two hex bolts with washers?

Thanks

Matt
 
Hi all,

Great DIY guide! I haven't done it my self but I brought mine to the workshop. But now it has been replaced for the 3rd time and 4th is coming up next week... the gasket keeps getting blown out, no clue why and my mechanic also doesn't understand. Does anyone has the same issue? Or some advise how to resolve?

Hope you can help me out!

Cheers,
André
 
Hi Andre,

I've also done mine for the 3rd time. When I took it apart for the first time the gasket was in two parts, so I was excited to see it fixed with a new gasket in place. After putting it all back together again, I was disappointed when it was blowing again right from first start-up. Pulled it apart again and discovered the new gasket was not a perfect copy (non-VAG), so the holes were not quite aligned and it was distorting. Put it back together again while a new gasket was on order. But then, yet again, it's blowing with the genuine gasket in place. I can feel it with my hand coming out of the join at one particular point.

I'm now taking it to an indy garage to see if they have better luck than me, but I'm prepared to be told that either the turbo has a hot side crack, the manifold is cracked - or both!!! Ouch!

Is yours in a standard state of tune?

Cheers,
Mark
 
NickA555 said:
I'm thinking of doing this job on my 06 roadster in the coming weeks. A question for you guys that have already done the work, did you order three new bolts as well as the gasket or just the gasket?

Thanks
you will be lucky to come away with 3 reusable bolts.
most get 2 out and strip/struggle with the 3rd.
order 3 new and will save you pain - not cheap though.
also the 3 new bolts are upgraded part numbers with larger heads...
 
jhoneyman said:
NickA555 said:
I'm thinking of doing this job on my 06 roadster in the coming weeks. A question for you guys that have already done the work, did you order three new bolts as well as the gasket or just the gasket?

Thanks
you will be lucky to come away with 3 reusable bolts.
most get 2 out and strip/struggle with the 3rd.
order 3 new and will save you pain - not cheap though.
also the 3 new bolts are upgraded part numbers with larger heads...
Thanks mate. Just ordered 3 new bolts/washers and the gasket!
 
I was lucky(?) and managed to get all three bolts out without a problem (I used a breaker bar - couldn't justify the cost of an impact wrench). I think the key (and it's worthing taking this advice anyway) is to liberally coat the bolts with PB blaster at least a day before, give them a hearty tap with a centre punch and hammer a few times over the preceding day, and be sure to remove the bracket that supports the charge pipe (4 torx headed bolts). If you don't do this last stage you can't get your socket straight on the bolt nearest the cylinder head and you therefore run the risk of rounding it off.
 
Well I did this job at the weekend and have driven the car each day since.
What a difference. I have lost an awful noise that i thought my turbo was about to explode.
That made me back off the throttle.
Now I can hear the turbo lightly whistle now as it spools, so I give it a bit more. :D
 
61 - 80 of 103 Posts