im gonna say possible dead MAF, you have vag com log the MAF and boost, requested vs actual and graph up to see where the issue is.
www.ross-tech.com/vag-com/cars/tdi.html
Agreed. The above symptoms are signs of a failing maf, not sticky vnt
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im gonna say possible dead MAF, you have vag com log the MAF and boost, requested vs actual and graph up to see where the issue is.
www.ross-tech.com/vag-com/cars/tdi.html
just to clarify, by actuator i mean the vacuum diaphram
found out the cable is 200 odd quid due to it being canbus
Oh right so you mean like the N75 valve..... umm havent heard of an actual failure of one, they tend to be very reliable electric devices, saying that i had an issue with my N18 (which is the same as the N75 only different colour cap) which caused lumpyness and hesitancy, so thats not to say they cant have little niggles. Cheap to replace out though.
The whole system seems to be very reliable for most but for others stuff fails, including the N75, they can sometimes be cured with a clean out but other than that it's a replacement job.
(Yeh I spend to much time on the tdiclub site)

You don;t spend enough time
I've never heard of an instance of an N75 failing in a PD or CR engine.
They fail on a regular basis on 1.8ts though.
How would you suggest you clean out the N75? Unlike the 1.8t, the N75 is inside a black vacuum control box along with a load of other gubbins. So 1, how you would clean it out and 2, what would you be cleaning out of it.
One point to note: never leave WD40 on anything you want to stay mobile, always clean it out with something else such as the "teflon-based" high performance spray lubricants. WD40 is not a lubricant, it's primarily for getting water out of electrical systems (WD=Water Displacement) and it also helps to break up rust deposits. Left in place it gradually hardens.
Anyhoo a number of people have had success spraying them full of stuff like switch cleaner, giving them a good shake, spraying some more repeating it and then leaving them to drain a bit. For some reason some of them seem to get a bit oilyNo idea how that happens.
+1 - how many times does you see it being used as a penetrating oil as wellit just makes a mess!
I'd guess the engine block breather feeds back into the turbo intake, oil vapours are then sent through the boost pipes - N75 takes a feed from the boost line to regulate the wastegate and gets all the lovely vapours passing through.
Another good reason for a catch can on ANY engine??
It doesn;t work that way on a PD or CR engine. The N75 isn't a moving solenoid, the way it is on a 1.8t
Is it more in the vacuum side of things on the PD & CRs? I was going on what had been quoted above regarding the operation of it![]()