Let me guess, your "Brother" drives a Commodore or a Falcon ?
Hello All,
I posted this on the newbies forum without much luck...
I've owned two VAG TDIs, a 2005 Golf and a 2006 Jetta. Both engines have been very reliable and economical. I still have the Jetta which has now done 120,000km.
I'm considering replacing the Jetta with a new VAG car (probably an Octavia) but I'd prefer a manual and manuals are no longer available with TDIs in Australia, so I'm looking at getting a petrol 103 TSI which has near diesel-like torque and economy.
However my brother (a car enthusiast) has warned me against buying a small capacity high-output engine like the 103 TSI because it will "blow up" after a few years. I've trawled the VAG forums both here and overseas, and I can see plenty of problems with the 118 TSI "twincharger" engine, but it is my understanding this is a completely different engine (EA111 based) to the 103 TSI currently sold in Golfs and Octavias (EA211 based).
Is this correct, and should I be concerned about the longevity of a 103 TSI engine? Is it an overly-complex highly tuned engine that will cause me no end of problems?
Thanks.
Let me guess, your "Brother" drives a Commodore or a Falcon ?
2014 MY14 Corrida Red Elegance Wagon TDI
2009 MY10 Race Blue RS Wagon TSI 6 sp. manual. (Gone)
2011 MY12 Yeti 77 TSI DSG.
I suggest you have a look at Europe, UK and the US for reviews on that engine.
It's unfortunate the 118TSI and 135TSI had problems, but its related only to that engine.
that's not to say you'll never have an issue, but your brother can certainly not comment on their reliability - unless he knows something we don't?
I wouldn't say that the 103TSI is 'high output'.
We have 2 90TSI (similar 1.4L turbo only) engined cars in our household (2011 octavia, 2010 mk6 golf), both are 36-42,000km so far with no problems yet (touch wood).
2012 Yeti 77TSI, Candy White
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If it's turbo only then it will be fine - not much different in tech to the diesels when looked at through a telescope.
i have an EA888 based 118tsi / 1.8L octavia. 134,000km inc 84,000km with a remap & relatively trouble free.
A mate of mine has the 77tsi polo & drives like he stole it & the engine is faultless. The DSG is another story.
I do recomend you run on 98ron though.
I'd have no hesitation in buying a 103tsi manual Octavia - esp now the 1.8litre is DQ200 only.
Hope that helps.
carandimage The place where Off-Topic is On-Topic
I used to think I was anal-retentive until I started getting involved in car forums
So my brother made a pretty blanket statement that applies to all small-capacity high-output engines, and I have to say 103kW and 250Nm from 1.4L is pretty impressive
He says...
...and...For a small petrol engine kW/litre * Reliability = k(cost). As you increase the power output of your engine your reliablity goes to zero.
Are there any mechanics or engineers here who have any thoughts on this?What Engineers develop is driven by market demands, not by what constitutes good engineering. These days consumers demand instant gratification, a market driven by facts and figures like CO2 outputs and in the end the original purchaser rarely has any interest in the longevity of the product as they will simply replace it on about a four year cycle.
CO2 figures aren't market driven, they're driven by Euro emissions standards. Consumer turbos have been around for a long, long time and there are a bunch of naturally aspirated engines that have had terrible issues, the BMW's E90 320i motor springs to mind.
The 118TSI (1.4 Twincharge, not the 1.8 Turbo in the older Octavia) was much more complicated than a normal turbo engine, but at the same time my friend has the older 125kW version of that engine in a 2007 Golf 5 GT w/ 120K on the clock and it runs like a charm.
I think your brother is carrying some outdated turbo bias, fuelled by once off flakey models (while ignoring problem NA engines).
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