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Thread: B7 2012 118tsi passat dsg7 speed HUGE oil consumption

  1. #1
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    B7 2012 118tsi passat dsg7 speed HUGE oil consumption

    Yet another thread about this yes sorry. But I have trawled and searched for weeks to get a clear indication of the issue on my car. But I thought Id start a thread to help sort it out. VWs use alot of oil yes. But mine is getting rediculous.
    In 4000 kms Ive used 1 and a half 4 L containers of oil.
    Then it started missfiring. So clearly oil is getting into the cylinders.
    I first changed the PCV valve to eliminate that possibility at $180 which didnt do anything.
    Then I pulled out the spark plugs and inspected them. They were terrible. A car that is only 5 years old and 160k kms shouldnt run like this.
    So put in new ones today. Runs much better.
    There was an unrelated fault (coolant leak) which I fixed which meant I had to remove the intake manifold. While that was off i noticed big blobs of dried up oily gunk on the intake valve shafts.
    So i need to determine where the oil is getting into the cylinders from. So i blocked off the pcv pipe to pre turbo pipe and routed that into a bottle. After a week of driving that was still clean. So it appears the engine has no blow by at all.
    These engines run a vacumn pipe from the intake manifold to the pcv valve. The pcv valve is a complex thing on these engines. Having two separate valves. So i was thinking maybe under boost oily blow by air is being blown through this pipe directly into the cylinders. Ive set up a temporary system with a glass bottle to capture it if anything is going that way.
    I also took apart the intercooler piping only to find a little oil. Not much. So thought maybe the turbo seal on the intake side is leaking but it seems now maybe it isn't.
    Anyway now driving it like this with the pcv gasses isolated from the intake system so if oil is still contaniminating the cylinders then it must be either rings or valve stems seals.
    Looking for information from anyone familiar with these engines and these symptons before I pay for a mechanic to rebiuld the engine.
    Anyone got some advice?
    The car has a recall sticker on it. But dont know if this was for lean engine 118TSI issues or DSG repair.
    The 7 speed dsg is junk and used to shudder on take off so ive reset the dsg and now its fine.

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jwarnes71 View Post
    The car has a recall sticker on it. But dont know if this was for lean engine 118TSI issues or DSG repair.
    The 7 speed dsg is junk and used to shudder on take off so ive reset the dsg and now its fine.
    There should be a campaign number printed on the recall sticker which should tell you what recall work was done. I think you'll find it was for the incorrect DSG fluid recall - one of these two:

    Volkswagen Group Australia Pty Ltd—Polo, Golf, Golf Wagon, Golf Cabriolet, Beetle, Jetta, Passat, and Caddy Vehicles <- Affected models built between 2008 and 2011
    Volkswagen Group Australia Pty Ltd—Polo, Golf, Golf Wagon, Golf Cabriolet, Jetta, Passat, and Caddy Vehicles <- this one affected MY2013 vehicles, which yours might be

    To my knowledge, there was no recall for the lean burn issue in the 118TSI (there may have been a service campaign, I'm not sure) - even if there was, it was for the 1.4l twin-charged engine fitted to Golfs, not the 1.8l turbo fitted to your Passat.

    The 7-speed DSG shudder may have been a premature clutch pack wear issue - if a reset has solved your issue, hopefully it's a permanent fix. If not, as I understand it, the latest revision of the clutch packs resolves the issue.

    Regarding the oil consumption issue - your car is likely to be less than 12 months out of new car warranty (if you don't have an extended warranty) - it might be worth approaching a VW dealership for a goodwill repair of the excess oil consumption. You've got nothing to lose. IIRC, VW consider 1l/1000km to be acceptable - but you are well above this at 1.5l/1000km, so between VW wanting to rebuild customer confidence and you nudging them with the ACL, they might just say yes to a goodwill repair.

  3. #3
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    Thankyou. Top notch information!

  4. #4
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    Well VW said the engine has done too many kms and are not interested in repairing it. Said oil consumption was normal. Normal to polute the environment with 8 litres a month??
    So ive ordered a set of valve seals and we will see what that does.
    Im getting a gut feeling someone has run the incorrect fuel and oil in this car.

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jwarnes71 View Post
    Well VW said the engine has done too many kms and are not interested in repairing it. Said oil consumption was normal. Normal to polute the environment with 8 litres a month??
    So ive ordered a set of valve seals and we will see what that does.
    Im getting a gut feeling someone has run the incorrect fuel and oil in this car.
    So what's the history of the car? How long have you owned it? Service history? How many kilometres has it travelled?

    Cheers

    George
    06 Jetta 2.0TFSI Killed by a Lexus!
    09 Eos 2.0TSI DSG Loved this car but has now gone to a new home!!
    14 EOS 2.0 TSI has arrived!

  6. #6
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    Have you done a compression test or a leak down test? If the results are bad the stem seals won't help. If the results are ok it might help.

  7. #7
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    Im looking for a compression tester to try it. As mine did not fit.
    Does anyone know if you can remove the head without taking the engine out of the car?

  8. #8
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    History of the car is unknown. Bought it a few months back. Kicking myself I didnt check the engine more thouroughly. By the looks of it the wrong oil was used by previous owner but other than the need for the engine to get a serious clean everything else is ok.

  9. #9
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    Likely will need new pistons. Head can come off with engine in the car, but pistons can't come out unless you remove the gearbox.
    Volks Handy
    Servicing - Repairs - Diagnostics - Mobile fault scanning/clearing - A/c work
    10 years experience working for Audi/VW/Skoda
    Now in Perth NOR, Western Australia.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Snail Style View Post
    Likely will need new pistons. Head can come off with engine in the car, but pistons can't come out unless you remove the gearbox.
    Not true - there are 2 holes on the gearbox side of the sump so you can access the 2 last bolts to get the sump off.

    I've just stripped and rebuilt my 118 tsi engine this way, with 7 speed dsg - leaving the cylinder block and gearbox in the engine bay, just taking off everything around it, sump, head and pistons - I upgraded to forged pistons and also cleaned and reworked the head, fitted a new timing chain, cam adjuster, tensioner etc whilst I was there.

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