Yeah nothing to worry about.
Golf Mk6 GTI | Deep Black Pearl | 6MT | 5dr | 18" Detroits |
Mods Ordered: RTR ECU Remap | 3" Milltek TBE | VW Racing Intake | Revo Intake Pipe |
Accessories: Gloss Black rear VW badge | OSIR Foot Rest | P3 Gauge | GTI Scuff Plates | Yellow LAMIN-X fog light tint | PIAA Yellow Fog Light Globes |
Yeah nothing to worry about.
Wikipedia is your friend re: Exhaust Scavenging & Resonance:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scavenging_(automotive)
Manifold (automotive) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaScavenging is the process of pushing exhausted gas-charge out of the cylinder and drawing in a fresh draught of air ready for the next cycle in automotive usage. This process is essential in having a smooth-running internal combustion engine. Modifying the exhaust system, (i.e. modifying the exhaust gas velocity by changing exhaust tube diameters) can detract from the "ideal" scavenging effects, and reduce fuel efficiency and power if not properly planned out and executed. To increase scavenging potential, the entire path from intake to exhaust(i.e. all powertrain parts) to tailpipe must be tuned in sync with each other. This will ensure that the air flow is never interrupted. The acceleration and deceleration of thus exhaust gas is what will hinder the scavenging potential. For example, fast flowing heads and a tunnel ram intake combined with a badly planned camshaft and exhaust system will cause the air to "slow down" and "speed up" throughout its journey, thus reducing its scavenging potential. So, to increase scavenging potential, the air must maintain a positive linear acceleration curve.
I'd rather some resonance under load at 2400rpm-2500rpm than the drone at highway speeds from an alternative exhuast system.When an engine starts its exhaust stroke, the piston moves up the cylinder bore, decreasing the total chamber volume. With the exhaust valve opens, the high pressure exhaust gas escapes into the exhaust manifold or header, creating an exhaust pulse comprising three main parts: The high-pressure head is created by the large pressure difference between the exhaust in the combustion chamber and the atmospheric pressure outside of the exhaust system. As the exhaust gases equalize between the combustion chamber and the atmosphere, the difference in pressure decreases and the exhaust velocity decreases. This forms the medium-pressure body component of the exhaust pulse. The remaining exhaust gas forms the low-pressure tail component. This tail component may initially match ambient atmospheric pressure, but the momentum of the high- and medium- pressure components reduces the pressure in the combustion chamber to a lower-than-atmospheric level. This relatively low pressure helps to extract all the combustion products from the cylinder and induct the intake charge during the overlap period when both intake and exhaust valves are partially open. The effect is known as scavenging. Length, cross-sectional area, and shaping of the exhaust ports and pipeworks influences the degree of scavenging effect, and the engine speed range over which scavenging occurs.
Cheers
WJ
Last edited by WhiteJames; 27-05-2010 at 02:20 PM.
I finally got my car after 6 months 4 days wait, was exrtemely excited to own a VW GTI till i noticed this sound.
I had great expectations from a German built VW, but this is very annoying & some how i cant get this thing out of my head. Otherwise it is an absolute GEM.
5dr CW, DSG, Leather, 18", Dynaudio, Sunroof, MDI, Tints.
Apparently there is an AWE K04 kit coming for the MK6 GTI for 4k and 1k to fit it, that would solve the rattle.
AWE K04 KIT - VW GTI MKVI Forum / VW Golf MKVI Forum / VW R20 Forum / VW GTI Forum - Golfmk6.com
But their kit (at least following to the other thread linked in your thread), does not contain the Turbo-Back Exhaust, Intercooler, or Air Intake components which are required in the upgrade. This means that the cost is not quite as much as the APR Stage 3 kit, but is approaching that (in the USA it appears to be ~$5000 for the AWE kit, including AWE exhaust and intake etc, vs ~$6800 for the full blown APR Stage 3 kit - both not including installation).
Yeah it's Almost the same cost but hardly as good power as the APR stage 3. If you're gonna do it may as well do it properly as the labor would be about the same.
That sounds terrible. I can hear it.
I have one on order, and if this is what It sounds like all the time, Im cancelling sorry.
PS - Why do some people NOT have it, If its normal? What a crock.
To be honest, I saw an STi MY09 model today, In white. With those pumped guards, and tints.. Maybe a MY11 WRX is what needs to be done after all.
No rattles there. I have OCD so something like that will annoy the **** out of me.
I will be devistated If I spend 50K on FWD car because of "quality" and I end up getting a car that rattles like its pinging its head off every time I am in the mid range, which is probably, all the time.
Last edited by REXman; 28-05-2010 at 01:07 AM.
That's a bit extreme isn't it?
I'm sure a WRX would have other issues, like they are pig ugly and a cheap interior.
You could always consider a MK5 GTI or Pirelli, but then you have to keep an eye on the cam follower issue.
Anyway if enough people report it to their service manager and get it noted on their history perhaps VW may do something about it in the future.
GTI MKVI Candy White | 5 door | DSG | ACC | 18" Detroits | Leather | Electric Seat | Sunroof | RNS510 | Dynaudio | Park Assist | RVC | MDI
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