Date: Thu, 18 Oct 2001 21:09:51 -0700
Reply-To: Shawn Wright <swright@SLS.BC.CA>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Shawn Wright <swright@SLS.BC.CA>
Subject: Re: 1.6 TD torque specs
In-Reply-To: <001801c1584a$52e443c0$f430800a@athalon900>
Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
Is this the same place as www.vwdieselparts.com? Surprising, as I've perused his site several
times over the years, and he seems to know diesels well. I've heard the odd good comment about
him, but none bad until now.
Anyway, here's the specs from my 85-92 Jetta Bentley:
Exhaust manifold to cylinder head: 18 ft lb
Oil supply line to turbo/return line to oilpan/return line flange on turbo: 22 ft lb
(I mention these because I've had leaks at both return line junctions on mine before)
Exhaust pipe to turbo(nut): 18 ft lb
Turbo to exhaust manifold (12pt bolt with high temp anti-seize): 33 ft lb
Those turbos are more forgiving than you might think: when I did my headgasket a few years
back, I re-installed the oil supply line to the turbo but forgot to remove the rubber plug I had
installed, which somehow managed escape my notice. I drove the car several miles before the
turbo started to act and sound strange. I then remembered the plug, and in a panic reassembled it
all without the plug, and ran the engine, expected to find a seized turbo... but it ran fine, and has
ever since. It still amazes me that it survived such abuse! (now at ~280k km on this engine).
Good luck!
On 18 Oct 2001 at 19:01, Michael Moery wrote:
> Since swapping my original diesel engine for a 1.6 turbo diesel two
> months ago, I've been looking for a shop manual that includes that
> engine. One for the mid-eighties Quantum that donated the engine is the
> goal. This book has been tough to find. Anyway, what I need right now
> are the torque specs for the turbo-to-exhaust bolts, and the
> exhaust-to-head bolts.
> Seems the engine rebuilder, one VW DIESEL PARTS in Ohio, over-torqued
> some exhaust nuts, and under-torqued others, so one snapped after a few
> hundred miles. Upon removing the turbo and manifold, I then discovered
> that they had used three of the correct exhaust gaskets, and one wrong
> one (for the non-diesel engine), and this one was breaking up, since it
> extends into the exhaust passage. I guess it's lucky the stud failed
> when it did, or the turbo may well have ended up sucking in some of that
> gasket. The rebuilder, VW DIESEL PARTS, doesn't seem to even have the
> correct gasket to send. Their helpfulness and concern dried up quickly
> the day the engine was paid for! They seem equally disinterested in the
> main oil seal I had to replace immediately after engine installation, as
> the one they put in leaked badly.
> So. if anyone out there has a book with these specs in it, I would be
> very grateful, and if anyone out there is contemplating replacing your
> diesel, choose your rebuilder very carefully!
>
> Mike Moery, Anchorage, AK
> -------------------
> ||E[__] [__]|[_]\\
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> * * * =( o )--------( o )=*
> ****'Ol Bessie '82TD***
>
>
Shawn Wright, I.T. Manager
Shawnigan Lake School
swright@SLS.bc.ca
http://Zuiko.sls.bc.ca/swright
http://www.sls.bc.ca
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