I expected more witchcraft and sorcery, to be honest.
Ever wondered how the DSG gearbox worked ?
I don't mean the flappy paddles - what's inside the gearbox and how is it all arranged ?
OK....from the blurbs......concentric dual clutches..........dual input shafts - one for odd gears the other for the evens
All sounds too simple
I've rebuilt gearboxes in a previous life but I'd love to know how they physically put these things together .....
Found this video on YouTube...............couple of seemingly "clowns" but stay with it and all is revealed
Verrrrrrrrrrry clever. ..........makes the conventional clutch and gearbox look quite "old hat"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mj1Vk7SE-TI
BTW I've posted this in the Yeti forum as well
Last edited by Blue103TDIDSG; 14-03-2016 at 02:23 PM.
I expected more witchcraft and sorcery, to be honest.
Me too, in a way
I had the concentric clutch bit sort of worked out in my head (with the help of a couple articles I read)
unfortunately could never find any diagrams
But the dual input shafts had me tossed - for some reason I was trying to see them side by side not end to end
Obviously the end to end stacks up with the concentric shafts - pardon the pun
Much greater brains than mine put this together !!!
Just nice to see VW using this technology
I will never be able to afford the likes that usually have them
Hi there, this is amazing! Thanks for posting the video.
It explains, from what I got out of the video, why my DSG gearbox just this weekend only engaged every 2nd gear. It is a 2014 MK7 TSI 1.4L Golf (26,000km).
It's in service now ...
Cheers
And for all this wonderful technology you will pay a fortune when it goes bung , I spoke to an auto transmission shop and they refused to work on them .
Until recently, there was barely any repair documentation on them.
However, there's plenty on replacing the clutches and Mechatronics unit, which are the usual culprits.
7-speed dry clutch DSGs were the most problematic.
Have heard of internal bearing failures on the 6-speed wet clutch ones, but not that common. Have driven a few with well over 200,000kms on them, and yeah pretty much faultless. Just throw oil and a filter through them every 60K, and keep on motoring. Same can't be said for the conventional autos VW were using. Ticking time-bombs.
'07 Touareg V6 TDI with air suspension
'98 Mk3 Cabriolet 2.0 8V
'99 A4 Quattro 1.8T
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