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Going non-VNT is the only real option, but that will get expensive!
As for the thrashing it.... I'm not so sure that would even be a long term cure.
Fish
I do drive with gusto, so it's largely down to poor design of the system rather than a weak right foot.
Hey ho. I honestly can't see the merit of getting it cleaned. Labour for removal and refitting, together with replacement oil, filtre and oil feed pipe are going to be the same, so there's just the matter of comparing the cost of a new turbo against paying labour to have the current one split and cleaned. At least a new turbo will be covered by a warranty for a period of time.
mine was cleaned just over a week ago and its still playing up
Well if you're just geting a new one a chucking the old one I'll give you my addressSeriously, do it yourself, a new turbo costs a fair whack and I think yours is all in one with the manifold on the BKD too which means it costs even more! You'd be bonkers to replace it just because the vanes are sticky. If you clean it properly it'll last for ages and if you do the egr removal etc as well you shouldn't need to do it again. It could also just need an actuator, might not be the vanes at all, that's just one possiblity.
A-ha. When the car was MOTs in January, the soot levels were borderline. I assume then that if the turbo is repalced/cleaned up and the EGR is deleted, then this would solve that problem too.
Then the vanes aren't your problem, actuator, N75, leaking boost pipe, dodgy map sensor, dodgy maf sensor, bad map, leaking vac pipes etc.
You don't always get a fault code, you need to try testing stuff sometimes to get to the bottom of the problem
http://www.myturbodiesel.com/1000q/multi/limp-mode-TDI-fix.htm
http://www.myturbodiesel.com/1000q/multi/low-power-fix-TDI.htm
Even a clogged intake can cause limp mode but it wont throw a code, a leak around the egr valve etc
The N75 is the valve that opens and closes to allow the vacuum through to vary the boost pressure, the map sensor is what detects the pressure in the boost pipes etc to determine how much boost there is, maf sensor tells the ecu how much air is coming into the intake from the airfilter. One of the things you could do is to get someone who knows how to use vagcom to run some logs, they can tell you various things that are going on as you drive.