I'm a bit concerned that there was no compression at all, wondering if the 'ECO' cam actuators had jammed the valves open?
Iām Not going pretend I know what that means Im from the old days escort Mexicos and Cortinaās GT
I'm a bit concerned that there was no compression at all, wondering if the 'ECO' cam actuators had jammed the valves open?
Iām Not going pretend I know what that means Im from the old days escort Mexicos and Cortinaās GT
I have an idea of what might have been wrong.It was a tough choice.. we know the cylinder had no compression after it failed and in the past the plug on 3 on got oily regularly so changed an injector which seemed to cure the wet/contaminated plug. Back then we did a compression test and all cylinders were fine.
Would be interesting to see your findings and also if any other high mileage 1.4 tsi ACT engines have had this issue.I have an idea of what might have been wrong.
These engines are direct injection so you do not have fuel washing over the intake valves to keep them clean. The valves getting gummed up is a known issue with direct injection. The bigger VW engines use a combination of direct and port injection to avoid it. It's very possible that you suffered a stuck valve due to a buildup of crap on it.
It's tricky. My car is running fine, it's at 65K miles now, but I'm thinking about getting the intake cleaned as a precaution. I may take some stuff off and get a borescope in there to see what it looks like but I don't know how bad the buildup has to be before it's likely to cause a problem.
I've not heard of any.Would be interesting to see your findings and also if any other high mileage 1.4 tsi ACT engines have had this issue.
Certainly, a stuck valve would be hitting the piston!I've not heard of any.
I knew about the potential for this issue when I bought the car. I was expecting to be looking at having the intake cleaned by now, 65K miles, and I looked into the cleaning process years ago. Walnut shell blasting looks promising.
I was expecting to see some mild signs of fouling,like reduced economy or lack of power, but that has got me slightly worried that the first indication of trouble might be more serious. I don't know if it's an interference engine, most are, and if so a stuck valve could be catastrophic.
Yip, something I've experienced before.Certainly, a stuck valve would be hitting the piston!
Yip, something I've experienced before.
But what do you do? How can you predict when it might happen without removing the intake to look? And when do you do that?
The annoying thing is that there is nothing you can do to prevent this. Better fuel or cleaners won't help as it goes in after the valves. You could dump cleaner down the intake while it's running but you don't know if it's worked without removing the intake. It's not a very clever design.
I agree just had my valves inspected when the engine swap took place, all ok not much build up, but I will get them checked in about 50 k ish time.This is an interesting video:
85,000 miles worth of build up!
from this thread:
Clogged up Intake Valve Cleaning - 1.4 TSI EA211 CHPA
Just thought I'd share this with you, I'm making a three part video for cleaning the intake valves using 3 different methods to see if any or all of them work. I've made and posted the first 2 videos with plans to make the third video using the walnut blast method soon. The videos include...www.seatcupra.net
Personally If I had a petrol DI engine I would be factoring in an inlet cleaning preventative maintenance every 50-60k miles.
I've not heard of any.
I knew about the potential for this issue when I bought the car. I was expecting to be looking at having the intake cleaned by now, 65K miles, and I looked into the cleaning process years ago. Walnut shell blasting looks promising.
I was expecting to see some mild signs of fouling,like reduced economy or lack of power, but that has got me slightly worried that the first indication of trouble might be more serious. I don't know if it's an interference engine, most are, and if so a stuck valve could be catastrophic.