Drovkin All American 8438 Posts user info edit post |
To show myself as a total noob, wanted to ask how difficult something like this would be to replace.
Wife has a 1998 VW Beetle (2.0), and we've been noticing an oil spot in the garage lately. She took it in to get the oil changed, and mentioned the leak. They said it could be the valve cover gasket, and wanted to charge her $200 to replace. That seemed really high to me.
Could someone with little automotive experience but a decent mechanical understanding replace it? 2/3/2010 8:18:01 PM |
m52ncsu Suspended 1606 Posts user info edit post |
i can't speak to that car specifically, but its generally easy enough to tackle 2/3/2010 8:54:36 PM |
Drovkin All American 8438 Posts user info edit post |
I will say the difficult part looks to be removing the upper intake manifold. Having to remove the accelerator cable just makes me a bit nervous for some reason 2/3/2010 9:12:50 PM |
Seotaji All American 34244 Posts user info edit post |
in my car and the other cars i've seen, the cable comes right off. there is a notch that it fits in, just turn the part that it fits into (looks like a round wheel with a notch, located on the throttle body) and slide it out. 2/3/2010 9:44:03 PM |
beethead All American 6513 Posts user info edit post |
not too hard. you will need some sockets and some allens. 2/3/2010 11:20:57 PM |
arghx Deucefest '04 7584 Posts user info edit post |
sometimes the hardest part can be actually getting the valve cover off because the gasket is hardened on there. and then you have to get all the pieces of the gasket off without damaging everything. 2/4/2010 7:54:36 PM |
paerabol All American 17118 Posts user info edit post |
i know nothing about VWs but valve cover gaskets are generally easy...swapped mine (saturn) in a parking lot in about 45 minutes, and I'm no mechanic. all I needed was a torque wrench and some RTV, totalled ~25 bucks. 2/5/2010 9:29:46 PM |
optmusprimer All American 30318 Posts user info edit post |
2/5/2010 11:36:52 PM |
Drovkin All American 8438 Posts user info edit post |
Welcome to the world of VW engineering
took 6 hours
yep, that's right. 6 hours.
2 main reasons it took so long. Because the car has been spewing oil inside, most of the hoses were basically caked on. Took a while to get some of them off. The second reason was because the valve cover was under the upper plenum, which has 7 bolts. 3 of them were relatively easy. 2 were down between the openings in the plenum. The last two were at the back of the friggin thing. Almost impossible to get out. At least 30 minutes for each bolt.
I did find out that the oil cap for the valve cover was broken. It's a special dealer part that I can't get at an AutoZone, so we'll see if that's it. The wife has my car and her keys right now so I can't start it up.
This just furthers my hate for VWs. I can't believe how tight everything was in there.
Oh well, at least it's done. If it still leaks, I'll just take it to the shop and let them handle it. 2/6/2010 3:22:36 PM |
Quinn All American 16417 Posts user info edit post |
VW's are hell on earth to work on. 2/6/2010 8:27:43 PM |
smc All American 9221 Posts user info edit post |
Not necessarily.
But their owners still love them. They even take pinup photos!
And just because they're my favorite TWW photoshops:
[Edited on February 6, 2010 at 10:41 PM. Reason : .] 2/6/2010 10:28:00 PM |
Drovkin All American 8438 Posts user info edit post |
Quote : | "VW's are hell on earth to work on." |
A friggin men2/7/2010 10:51:21 AM |
beethead All American 6513 Posts user info edit post |
vws arent that bad... beeltes can be a pain.
the raintray comes out fairly easily to give a lot more access to the back of the engine. 2/7/2010 11:13:17 AM |