Originally Posted by
dribs
My 118tsi is closing up to 13yrs of ownership from brand new.
I've noticed since last year, it has started to burn oil. Waterpump blew itself early last year and that got fixed up. Later that year (2023), got my first low oil level warning since ownership. Got it topped up.
Interested in how this turned out for you
My daughter's manual '09 118 is in pieces in the garage currently.. had shudder at warm idle, and plugged in to find a fault code for timing. Turned out to have low compression on cylinder 3, and adding some oil in the cylinder improved it slightly so I didn't think it was a valve. Daughter wanted to learn more about engines, so we're working through it together (I downloaded the VW workshop manual software - have used ELSAWIN before when I owned a couple of V6 audi's)
That's the back story.. now the part which answers your question
When we were taking it apart, I found a lot of oil in the charge air cooler (air-air intercooler in non-vw speak), as well as the air hoses - enough that the whole front end left a puddle on the garage floor when I put it into service position (remove whole front of car).
There was also a lot of carbon on the back of the intake valves and the intake ports.
There was some carbon on the back and stems of the exhaust valves.
All four pistons had a lot of carbon on the oil control rings - two had gummed up and were hard to turn.
So in her car, I think the turbo oil seals are leaking, which is causing oil to go into the intake manifold, and in turn the intake ports. That's the first thing I would ask the workshop to check - is whether there's much oil in the air hoses after the turbo. I say first because that's the easiest to fix - what I don't know is how fast it was leaking, she didn't have to top up the oil in 5k kms so not crazy fast.
Its also clear oil was flowing into the intake ports - possibly from the turbo seals, but also likely from the valve seals, as not only was there carbon on the back of th eintake valves, but there was also a fair bit of buildup in the heads where the valve stem comes through the guide (enough I could scrape chunks off with a pick). I pulled the valve seals out and they're fairly stiff but no visible tears.
Replacing the valve seals means taking the cam housing off, so more work than the turbo.
MY09 Golf 118tsi Comfortline Manual - Tan leather, heated seats, CAVD
(and other europeaon cars)
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