I will do that next Monday. Thanks for the advice.
Ask Guy about your tranny concerns, he usually knows all regarding that kind of thing
2008 VRS Wagon. Yellow, very yellow!
Forever blowing bubbles.
I will do that next Monday. Thanks for the advice.
DieselTig
Victoria
Tiguan Tdi Auto
Sorry if I burst your bubble mate. But if you're anything like me, you'd rather look after your Tig and keep on keeping on
The way I'm looking at it, is at least let my Tig get out of its manufacturer warranty, by which time the early adopters will have a better idea of how well the box can handle it. If the box handles it fine, then I'll go ahead and get it done to bring the performance in line with what the flavour of the day is. If it's not handling the tuning so well, then at least I'll have no regrets.
Tiguan TDI, 6spd Tiptronic Auto
Black, sunroof, comfort pack, off-road tech, tan leather, park assist & roof bars.
Avg 7.63L/100km over 189,000kms
I agree with you on this, until there is real evidence of the changes not affecting the reliability of the transmission then I will be happy to experiement, but not on a car new straight out of the box.
Besides, once you have done the change you will get used to improvement and you are back to same situtation, asking yourself can I get more improvements. What I am saying is how much is enough, and being humans as we are, cannot be satisfied with anything.
So, I look at it this way, if the car is delivering what it was designed for, then anymore is a bonus.
So, I will still be on this forum and putting forward my point of view on different aspects of the vehicle. I guess after driving real offroaders for years (hilux crew cab) this is more of a step back 4wd ability but again each vehicle has its uses.
DieselTig
Victoria
Tiguan Tdi Auto
Current: 2023 MY23 T-Roc R Lapiz Blue + Beats Audio + Black pack 2018 MY19 Golf R manual Lapiz Blue + DAP) 2018 MY18 Golf 110TSI (150TSI) Trendline manual White2014 Amarok TSI Red (tuned over 200kw + lots of extras) 2013 Up! manual Red 2017 Polo GTI manual Black Previous VWs and some others ...
I have been doing a fair bit of research lately and found out that 125kw/370NM is pretty much the extend you can go without doing mechanical changes to the engine. But there were two places where they said that they can get 130kw/410nm reliably. These places were www.audeespares.com.au and www.turboengineering.com.au both in Melbourne. The turbo engineering place they also have 4wd dynamometer and can actually confirm the output. They (Turbo Engineering) also commented that getting extra power is not difficult but the engine cannot sustain it under continuous load and the exhaust temperatures will go beyond the ~600C allowable limit. There were other technical terms they threw at me but I am not a Mechanical Engineer (Electrical Engineering backround) and was not easy to understand. Hope this sheds some light on remapping the diesels.
DieselTig
Victoria
Tiguan Tdi Auto
Thanks for that. Was there any mention of the gearbox though?
As I've said before, that's my concern. If there was a way of monitoring the gearbox temp and fluid pressures then I might be tempted to do the chipping earlier, and rely on my monitoring of the temps/pressures to prevent damage to the box, then I might be tempted to chip sooner rather than later.
So does this mean you are a step closer to taking the plunge?
Tiguan TDI, 6spd Tiptronic Auto
Black, sunroof, comfort pack, off-road tech, tan leather, park assist & roof bars.
Avg 7.63L/100km over 189,000kms
These guys including Guy said that the Tiptronic has no issues with extra torque.
I need to get delivery of my Tig and then I will take the plunge myself. I like the 400Nm, my sister has a BMW X5 diesel twin turbo and that punches around 500Nm+ and it is awsome to have you pinned to the seat during acceleration. Having flat torque curve you also get this pulling power nearly all the time. Cant wait.
Last edited by DieselTig; 30-07-2009 at 01:08 PM.
DieselTig
Victoria
Tiguan Tdi Auto
Unfortunately if you wanted pinned to the seat acceleration you should have ordered a Tiguan (any 1 would do) with the 2.0TSI motor. With tuning you would have had more than 400Nm and a 4500rmin wide powerband instead of the 2000rmin of the diesel.
The diesel Tig serves a different purpose as it should.
I'm also wary of custom tuning houses such as those mentioned as I have gone down that route before and would not recommend it. There is no way a small workshop can throw the same resources at a tuning solution as the big players in the market. APR/Oettinger/Revo etc do hundreds of hours of work & research on a single upgrade to ensure reliability and performance.
Current: 2023 MY23 T-Roc R Lapiz Blue + Beats Audio + Black pack 2018 MY19 Golf R manual Lapiz Blue + DAP) 2018 MY18 Golf 110TSI (150TSI) Trendline manual White2014 Amarok TSI Red (tuned over 200kw + lots of extras) 2013 Up! manual Red 2017 Polo GTI manual Black Previous VWs and some others ...
I prefer the diesel for economy and like the torque down low which is good when the car is loaded and up the hills. I am not a fun of pertrol turbo's and not into speeding either. I find the turbo diesel smoother and besides, my wife will be doing most of the driving, I will still be driving around in the Xtrail.
I have done lots of test drives of the 147TSI and the TDi and my preference was clearly diesel.
DieselTig
Victoria
Tiguan Tdi Auto
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