JannerAudi
31-07-2016, 07:48 AM
For the past six months I have been getting a bit of clutch judder so back in April I took the car into my Audi dealer where they rotated the flywheel through 180 degrees which apparently is an approved Audi procedure to overcome clutch judder. I then tried it over a few weeks to see if it improved as I thought with rotating the flywheel it might need to bed in a bit but clearly it did not work as the clutch judder was still evident some six weeks later.
This past week the car has been back in to my dealer and gladly they decided to replace the clutch, dual mass flywheel and thrust bearing under warranty. I have only had the car back for a couple of days and so not driven very far and although the clutch now feels a bit heavier so far I have not noticed any clutch judder. However, there are a couple of issues that are concerning me a bit and wondered if anyone else has noticed something similar on their manual transmission A6.
Issue 1.
With the engine running and the car in neutral, if I push the clutch in all the way and then let it out a little bit the engine revs rise by say a couple hundred RPM. With some other cars I have had the engine revs change a bit as I let the clutch out but normally the revs drop as a result of load from the gearbox. Also, with the car on level ground, if I creep forward in first gear, then depress the clutch pedal and let it out a bit to maintain momentum there is a slight thud like taking up backlash in the transmission. I had noticed it very slightly before having the clutch changed when parking the car in our garage depressing the clutch and re-engaging it to creep forward but since the clutch change it seems a bit more noticeable. Is it a case that the engine revs rise slightly by design so as to alleviate the likelihood of stalling the engine or is there something strange going on ? Is the thud I get common to all A6 cars or is there a transmission issue ?
Issue 2
I notice that if I sit in the car with the engine running and just tickle the throttle from tick over speed to 1200 RPM the engine rocks the car quite noticeably. Just wondered if this the same with other A6's or is this a weak engine mount perhaps.
Any information from anyone with similar issues (or not) would be appreciated.
Thanks, Janner
This past week the car has been back in to my dealer and gladly they decided to replace the clutch, dual mass flywheel and thrust bearing under warranty. I have only had the car back for a couple of days and so not driven very far and although the clutch now feels a bit heavier so far I have not noticed any clutch judder. However, there are a couple of issues that are concerning me a bit and wondered if anyone else has noticed something similar on their manual transmission A6.
Issue 1.
With the engine running and the car in neutral, if I push the clutch in all the way and then let it out a little bit the engine revs rise by say a couple hundred RPM. With some other cars I have had the engine revs change a bit as I let the clutch out but normally the revs drop as a result of load from the gearbox. Also, with the car on level ground, if I creep forward in first gear, then depress the clutch pedal and let it out a bit to maintain momentum there is a slight thud like taking up backlash in the transmission. I had noticed it very slightly before having the clutch changed when parking the car in our garage depressing the clutch and re-engaging it to creep forward but since the clutch change it seems a bit more noticeable. Is it a case that the engine revs rise slightly by design so as to alleviate the likelihood of stalling the engine or is there something strange going on ? Is the thud I get common to all A6 cars or is there a transmission issue ?
Issue 2
I notice that if I sit in the car with the engine running and just tickle the throttle from tick over speed to 1200 RPM the engine rocks the car quite noticeably. Just wondered if this the same with other A6's or is this a weak engine mount perhaps.
Any information from anyone with similar issues (or not) would be appreciated.
Thanks, Janner