Audi 80 1.9TDI 1994
#1
Guest
Posts: n/a
Audi 80 1.9TDI 1994
I have an 1994 Audi 80 1.9TDI, whic has done 200500 miles on the
clock. As the car has no trade-in value( dealer offer £250, and
loosing any discounts), I am looking at running it to the ground. The
clutch is still the original and therefore wondering how many miles
are still left?. Has anyone done more miles than this?. Major service
and timing belt is also overdue ( was quoted £300).
Is there a way to check what life is left on the clutch?
clock. As the car has no trade-in value( dealer offer £250, and
loosing any discounts), I am looking at running it to the ground. The
clutch is still the original and therefore wondering how many miles
are still left?. Has anyone done more miles than this?. Major service
and timing belt is also overdue ( was quoted £300).
Is there a way to check what life is left on the clutch?
#2
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Audi 80 1.9TDI 1994
Could it have been cubicsupport who typed:
|| I have an 1994 Audi 80 1.9TDI, whic has done 200500 miles on the
|| clock. As the car has no trade-in value( dealer offer £250, and
|| loosing any discounts), I am looking at running it to the ground. The
|| clutch is still the original and therefore wondering how many miles
|| are still left?. Has anyone done more miles than this?. Major service
|| and timing belt is also overdue ( was quoted £300).
|| Is there a way to check what life is left on the clutch?
Forget the clutch and give it a timing belt and oil change if overdue ASAP
! if the timing belt goes at that value, it becomes scrap in a few
miliseconds!!! and the turbo doesnt like dirty oil..... Take it to an
independant VAG specialist and should cost a lot less than £300 fo an
oil/filter change and timing belt.
as far as the clutch life is concerned, how long is a piece of string? it
could last 1 mile or 50,000 (I have had 250,000 out of a Mercedes on one
clutch and a year after I sold it it is still going) The cost of a clutch
plate is the difference between inspecting it and fixing it.
Des
---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.713 / Virus Database: 469 - Release Date: 30/06/2004
|| I have an 1994 Audi 80 1.9TDI, whic has done 200500 miles on the
|| clock. As the car has no trade-in value( dealer offer £250, and
|| loosing any discounts), I am looking at running it to the ground. The
|| clutch is still the original and therefore wondering how many miles
|| are still left?. Has anyone done more miles than this?. Major service
|| and timing belt is also overdue ( was quoted £300).
|| Is there a way to check what life is left on the clutch?
Forget the clutch and give it a timing belt and oil change if overdue ASAP
! if the timing belt goes at that value, it becomes scrap in a few
miliseconds!!! and the turbo doesnt like dirty oil..... Take it to an
independant VAG specialist and should cost a lot less than £300 fo an
oil/filter change and timing belt.
as far as the clutch life is concerned, how long is a piece of string? it
could last 1 mile or 50,000 (I have had 250,000 out of a Mercedes on one
clutch and a year after I sold it it is still going) The cost of a clutch
plate is the difference between inspecting it and fixing it.
Des
---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.713 / Virus Database: 469 - Release Date: 30/06/2004
#3
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Audi 80 1.9TDI 1994
Could it have been cubicsupport who typed:
|| I have an 1994 Audi 80 1.9TDI, whic has done 200500 miles on the
|| clock. As the car has no trade-in value( dealer offer £250, and
|| loosing any discounts), I am looking at running it to the ground. The
|| clutch is still the original and therefore wondering how many miles
|| are still left?. Has anyone done more miles than this?. Major service
|| and timing belt is also overdue ( was quoted £300).
|| Is there a way to check what life is left on the clutch?
Forget the clutch and give it a timing belt and oil change if overdue ASAP
! if the timing belt goes at that value, it becomes scrap in a few
miliseconds!!! and the turbo doesnt like dirty oil..... Take it to an
independant VAG specialist and should cost a lot less than £300 fo an
oil/filter change and timing belt.
as far as the clutch life is concerned, how long is a piece of string? it
could last 1 mile or 50,000 (I have had 250,000 out of a Mercedes on one
clutch and a year after I sold it it is still going) The cost of a clutch
plate is the difference between inspecting it and fixing it.
Des
---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.713 / Virus Database: 469 - Release Date: 30/06/2004
|| I have an 1994 Audi 80 1.9TDI, whic has done 200500 miles on the
|| clock. As the car has no trade-in value( dealer offer £250, and
|| loosing any discounts), I am looking at running it to the ground. The
|| clutch is still the original and therefore wondering how many miles
|| are still left?. Has anyone done more miles than this?. Major service
|| and timing belt is also overdue ( was quoted £300).
|| Is there a way to check what life is left on the clutch?
Forget the clutch and give it a timing belt and oil change if overdue ASAP
! if the timing belt goes at that value, it becomes scrap in a few
miliseconds!!! and the turbo doesnt like dirty oil..... Take it to an
independant VAG specialist and should cost a lot less than £300 fo an
oil/filter change and timing belt.
as far as the clutch life is concerned, how long is a piece of string? it
could last 1 mile or 50,000 (I have had 250,000 out of a Mercedes on one
clutch and a year after I sold it it is still going) The cost of a clutch
plate is the difference between inspecting it and fixing it.
Des
---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.713 / Virus Database: 469 - Release Date: 30/06/2004
#4
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Audi 80 1.9TDI 1994
Des wrote:
> as far as the clutch life is concerned, how long is a piece of string? it
> could last 1 mile or 50,000 (I have had 250,000 out of a Mercedes on one
> clutch and a year after I sold it it is still going) The cost of a clutch
> plate is the difference between inspecting it and fixing it.
>
A reasonable average seems to be 70-80,000 for average use (say your
typical 12K mile per year driver), but like Des says it can vary wildly.
If the car is driven by learner drivers (or just bad drivers!)in heavy
traffic It could wear out very quickly. If it gets driven up and down
quiet motorways by a sympathetic driver with very few stop/start cycles
it could last for many hundreds of miles.
There's a few signs of a clutch close to worn out:
1. they'll quite often get heavier.
2. Crunch into reverse gear more than normal (clutch drag)
3. Biting point very high up the pedal, and the cluch only just engages
without slipping.
Some of these can be caused by just bad adjustment though.
The answer is to drive it until it slips/grabs/makes horrid noises, and
then change it quickly. If the engine or box comes out for any reason,
change the clutch unless it's very new.
> as far as the clutch life is concerned, how long is a piece of string? it
> could last 1 mile or 50,000 (I have had 250,000 out of a Mercedes on one
> clutch and a year after I sold it it is still going) The cost of a clutch
> plate is the difference between inspecting it and fixing it.
>
A reasonable average seems to be 70-80,000 for average use (say your
typical 12K mile per year driver), but like Des says it can vary wildly.
If the car is driven by learner drivers (or just bad drivers!)in heavy
traffic It could wear out very quickly. If it gets driven up and down
quiet motorways by a sympathetic driver with very few stop/start cycles
it could last for many hundreds of miles.
There's a few signs of a clutch close to worn out:
1. they'll quite often get heavier.
2. Crunch into reverse gear more than normal (clutch drag)
3. Biting point very high up the pedal, and the cluch only just engages
without slipping.
Some of these can be caused by just bad adjustment though.
The answer is to drive it until it slips/grabs/makes horrid noises, and
then change it quickly. If the engine or box comes out for any reason,
change the clutch unless it's very new.
#5
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Audi 80 1.9TDI 1994
Des wrote:
> as far as the clutch life is concerned, how long is a piece of string? it
> could last 1 mile or 50,000 (I have had 250,000 out of a Mercedes on one
> clutch and a year after I sold it it is still going) The cost of a clutch
> plate is the difference between inspecting it and fixing it.
>
A reasonable average seems to be 70-80,000 for average use (say your
typical 12K mile per year driver), but like Des says it can vary wildly.
If the car is driven by learner drivers (or just bad drivers!)in heavy
traffic It could wear out very quickly. If it gets driven up and down
quiet motorways by a sympathetic driver with very few stop/start cycles
it could last for many hundreds of miles.
There's a few signs of a clutch close to worn out:
1. they'll quite often get heavier.
2. Crunch into reverse gear more than normal (clutch drag)
3. Biting point very high up the pedal, and the cluch only just engages
without slipping.
Some of these can be caused by just bad adjustment though.
The answer is to drive it until it slips/grabs/makes horrid noises, and
then change it quickly. If the engine or box comes out for any reason,
change the clutch unless it's very new.
> as far as the clutch life is concerned, how long is a piece of string? it
> could last 1 mile or 50,000 (I have had 250,000 out of a Mercedes on one
> clutch and a year after I sold it it is still going) The cost of a clutch
> plate is the difference between inspecting it and fixing it.
>
A reasonable average seems to be 70-80,000 for average use (say your
typical 12K mile per year driver), but like Des says it can vary wildly.
If the car is driven by learner drivers (or just bad drivers!)in heavy
traffic It could wear out very quickly. If it gets driven up and down
quiet motorways by a sympathetic driver with very few stop/start cycles
it could last for many hundreds of miles.
There's a few signs of a clutch close to worn out:
1. they'll quite often get heavier.
2. Crunch into reverse gear more than normal (clutch drag)
3. Biting point very high up the pedal, and the cluch only just engages
without slipping.
Some of these can be caused by just bad adjustment though.
The answer is to drive it until it slips/grabs/makes horrid noises, and
then change it quickly. If the engine or box comes out for any reason,
change the clutch unless it's very new.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
news2
Audi Mailing List
1
11-09-2003 08:33 PM
Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)