I would probably change the pedal assembly too for peace of mind. Happy days that it’s not the slave cylinder that failedProblem is the master cylinder
I can obtain the master cylinder alone for about £60 from another parts supplier. OEM of course.
Butt then TPS do the master cylinder only with the clutch pedal assembly for about £150+
Question is, is it recommended to replace both together, or just the master cylinder alone?
Both statements I can agree with
TPS did mention the part has been modified
So perhaps a fault was identified and its now been resolved.
Release it to the masses...doesn't work well so modify it...Bill Gates made billions this wayIs that similar to the:
- `modified` heater matrix
- `modified` water pump
- `modified` thermostat housing
- 'modified` expansion tank
VAG seem to spend a lot of time `improving` things to only `modify` them when they realise they don't work very well.![]()
I have a 14 plate 150 TDI and yes the slave cylinder is in the gearbox made from 100 % real plastic and the back blew out of it at around 70 k miles and guess what , the new part has been modifiedHi,
Having similar issues with my Leon 2015 2.0TDI, are you sure the Slave cylinder is a box out job?
Looking at the workshop manuals it looks as though it's external with a couple bolts and hydraulic line.
Started having issues a few months ago and had the Master replaced which seemed to fix but the past few weeks have been experiencing the same issues so was going to look at replacing the slave cylinder if anyone has any other ideas?
I have a 14 plate 150 TDI and yes the slave cylinder is in the gearbox made from 100 % real plastic and the back blew out of it at around 70 k miles and guess what , the new part has been modified
Does it feel the same as the original problem you were having? Seems strange changing the master cylinder would seem to fix it for a while. Might be worth bleeding the system in case you have air in the line.Hi,
Having similar issues with my Leon 2015 2.0TDI, are you sure the Slave cylinder is a box out job?
Looking at the workshop manuals it looks as though it's external with a couple bolts and hydraulic line.
Started having issues a few months ago and had the Master replaced which seemed to fix but the past few weeks have been experiencing the same issues so was going to look at replacing the slave cylinder if anyone has any other ideas?
It’s always possible that the slave has gone, they’re made of butter! Could always be an air pocket from switching the master cylinder, just guessing though?Update.
So I changed the Master cylinder along with the clutch pedal assembly (comes as one, can't buy them separately) about 4 weeks ago and the problem was fixed.
But now the clutch pedal has dropped again! Surely the new master cylinder hasn't failed again as it was from TPS. is it just coincidence that the Slave cylinder may have also now failed??
It’s always possible that the slave has gone, they’re made of butter! Could always be an air pocket from switching the master cylinder, just guessing though?
Has it completely gone? Or can the pedal be pulled up and have pressure again?
I think you're mixing up two different clutch hydraulic set ups.I thought, at least on the higher powered cars, the clutch fluid line from the master cylinder to the slave cylinder had a "damper valve" built into it, ie a form of one way valve which allows "full flow" in the direction of fluid being pushed down the release the clutch and had a restrictor slowing fluid in the other direction, ie to protect the fluid. My Audi S4 certainly has that as does higher powered Golfs and probably Leons and S3, and maybe more. The way these new cheap master cylinders are designed is unlike the older type in that there is no internal return spring to help the piston return to its "relaxed" position, that job is done by the spring on the clutch cylinder. So, it has been said on other forums, that when you have that fluid return "damper valve" and no return spring in the master cylinder, you can end up with the master cylinder piston and seal assembly being held down in the cylinder while the pushrod, which is meant to be fixed to the piston is being rapidly pulled back up and the result is that the pushrod parts company with the piston - and that is not handy!
If anyone knows better please speak up as I'm just passing on comments picked up from elsewhere - VW Group workshops just swop out old parts for new, but that potential weakness remains with no sign of VW Group understanding or bothering about it, which is just normal.