Tuesday, 17 December 2024

BMW S1000R Tyre review Michelin Road 6 5668 miles in 19 months

This is an ongoing tyre review piece for Michelin Road 6 


120/70/17 front tyre    

190/55/17 rear tyre 


new tyres fitted May 2023

see http://johnoldfield.blogspot.com/2023/05/bmw-s1000r-michelin-road-6-tyres-fitted.html


13920 miles front and rear changed to Road 6

14120 miles rear changed due to bulge manufacturing defect


Michelin recommend 36(2.48)/42(2.9)

bmw recommended

I found the ride way too harsh and skittish at the recommended pressures

so reduced tyre pressures -4 psi to 32(2.2)/38(2.6) 

Michelin tyre appears to be a much harder carcass than my previous Rosso iV which i ran at higher pressures on the same settings without issue.

Of note it may just be in my head, but the Road 6 take around 500 miles or more to bed in and soften.

So far performing brilliantly over 1500 miles across NC500 in mostly wet conditions


These have now been replaced by another set as of Dec 2024 and 19588 miles

(see https://johnoldfield.blogspot.com/2024/12/bmw-s1000r-yearly-service-2024.html)


start       : 13920 miles (actually 14120 for the rear see https://johnoldfield.blogspot.com/2023/06/bmw-s1000r-change-of-tyres-michelin.html ) May 2023
replaced : 19588 miles Dec 2024

So from May 2023 to Dec 2024, I have done 5668 miles on a pair of Michelin Road 6 tyres.

The rears were slightly squared off, and getting towards the wear indicators but at the limit Id like to ride in wet conditions.

front had loads of tread left (but I always like to change as a pair)

Brand new : tread depth is approx 5.5mm front and 6.5mm rear
When replaced : tread depths were XXXXXXXXX

front (after 5700 miles) lots of life left




rear (after 5700 miles) 


front (new)
rear (new)





BMW S1000R yearly service 2024 / including replacement Michelin Road 6 tyres [at 19588 miles]

 last service was Oct 2023 : see https://johnoldfield.blogspot.com/2023/10/bmw-s1000r-18k-service-at-16144-miles.html


bike is now 19588 miles (this is notionally the 24k service)

All done within the van at my home address by 
https://www.facebook.com/AGMotorcyclesManchester

see his post 
https://www.facebook.com/AGMotorcyclesManchester/posts/pfbid02xDdN4KCLGEs9wQbw62aCekQ71FgtRtdGWqLjbbCBaPxXSgfsgWR2M4BmsXD3GjXyl

Awesome service as usual, thanks Adam

This was around £500 all in 
(This makes it around £390 for tyres and fitting , with £110 for service)

At least now the "SERVICE !" message is gone and I can see the temperature guage again

Now I need to get a new MOT (UK) , drop the tyre pressures from the Michelin recommended

Michelin recommend 36(2.48)/42(2.9). I found the ride way too harsh and skittish at the recommended pressures, so I need to reduce tyre pressures -4 psi to 32(2.2)/38(2.6) 



and scrub those new tyres in......







Thursday, 12 December 2024

VW Tiguan Mk2 DSG Gearbox in Emergency Mode : Mechatronics failure/repair : Fault code 10666 - Position Sensor for Clutch 1 P173500 : KWJ Performance £1300 repair

 

I love the Tiguans, we spent a long time looking for this car, and in doing so I searched a lot of forums and understood the issues.
Weve had our car now for 4 years and 50,000 miles

Context

There are 4 main issues you can typically see with VW Tiguan's

1. cars with panoramic roof , drains get clocked == wet floors. Ive removed our drains. You should too
2. EGR cooler/valves/NoX fail.  Use high detergent diesel fuel ONLY. Our failed and was replaced 2024 (https://johnoldfield.blogspot.com/2024/06/vw-tiguan-mk2-2017-20-tdi-150-68000.html  68k miles cost £1300)
3. DSG Mechatronic issues (the reason for this post!)
4. Haldex issues (not seen yet but definitely needs a pump/guaze clean)


The car has been incredible, weve ran it from 24,000 miles (https://johnoldfield.blogspot.com/2020/09/goodbye-a180-hello-vw-tiguan-150-dsg.html)
to now (75k)
with the 2 big costs at 68,000(EGR/Nox) and 75,000 (DSG) miles 
otherwise its just been regular servicing and tyres (and 1 cambelt/waterpump)

anyway back to the Mechatronics failure


Car at 75,000 miles its  a 150 TDI DSG 4 Motion Tiguan
This is a 7 speed wet clutch system (DQ500?)


looks like this (not our car btw)




  • The car can be driven but only even gears 2,4,6 (i put the car into full manual mode and used the paddles to smooth out the ride)
  • Resets back to working ok if left for >40mins to cool down
  • Fault reappears after >30mins driving

Fault code read by VCDS

1 Fault Found:
10666 - Position Sensor for Clutch 1 
          P1735 00 [00101000] - Electrical Malfunction
          Intermittent - Confirmed - Tested Since Memory Clear
          Freeze Frame:
                    Fault Priority: 0
                    Fault Frequency: 1
                    Mileage: 118929 km
                    Date: 2024.11.23
                    Time: 14:32:07

                    Engine RPM: 1386.00 /min
                    Vehicle speed: 65 km/h
                    Coolant temperature: 91  C
                    Clutch: primary stat: Driving
                    selected gear: GANG_6
                    Driving position: d
                    Engine torque: 132 Nm
                    Control Module temperature: 89  C
                    Accelerator pedal position: 43.2 %
                    DTC memory status: 37



Possible issues (in order of cost to resolve low to high)

  • Battery (this is a simple one , if you have lots of fault codes check this out first, you might be lucky!)
  • Mechatronics unit (sits on side/front of gearbox) (Most likely our fault given the code we have)
  • Clutch packs / DSG gearbox

Car had a new battery this year.
And I have only this specific fault code and the way it appears after getting warm the most likely reason is a sensor/pressure failure in the mechatronics unit :-(

Given the number of cars with these gearboxes and the number of failures, there are now plenty of options to choose from to resolve the issue that dont necessarily involve VW dealers and huge waits.
Its still a very reliable gearbox (incredible piece of technology) but it can and does fail in various ways


Options to resolve mechatronic issues

  • If you are spanners handy then DIY on the drive (it doesnt appear hard to remove the unit) to remove and send off to ECU testing (approx £385+) , but will also need to add gearbox oil and filter (£250+)
  • Repair (approx £1300-1500 replace sensors/solenoids inc removal/refitting and fluids)
  • Replace (approx £3- 3.5k ) new mech unit , will require recoding as well)

Please keep in mind though the actual DSG oil and filter are themselves relatively expensive if you are considering DIY

Our trusted garage dont do mech repairs so suggested we look around for a specialist.

Im in the UK in Warrington (WA5 postcode) , i narrowed it down to 2 places based on the Google reviews and experience of tiguans

  1. https://kwjperformance.com/  
  2. https://www.selectorgearbox.com/


I opted for 
KWJ Performance , a conversation with Kieran quickly gave confidence, he says they do 2/3 a week of this repair, and we spoke about the reasons/the repair etc

The car was booked in for them to

  • remove mechatronics unit
  • replace both clutch 1 and 2 position sensors (note I only had a fault on sensor1, replacing the other is preventative maintenance given its all apart and sensors are relatively cheap) inc new seals
  • refit
  • basic settings / road test +oil + new filter
  • update VW service online record

turnaround in 2 days
They offer a 2 year warranty on the repair.

thankfully the problems did not extend beyond the mech unit into the clutchpacks/gearbox so that kept the cost down.

clutch pressures are fine.
basic settings applied ok (but they did say it took a while to get the car to adapt to the new sensors)

Total cost £1300

Car is now back, and hopefully thats it fixed.
Great experience from KWJ end to end, and they work on some far fancier stuff than a Diesel tiguan

Of note the car had never had a DSG gearbox service (75k) which is bad, but Im told the oil was ok and this did not necessarily contribute to the sensor/o ring failures.


Additional info


Heres some narrative I added to a forum recently as well when someone asked about the fault code.


age and mileage of car?

do you have a VW extended warranty? (if so take it to them)

Assuming you dont ....

I assume youve lost either even or odd gears?

Does it revert back to working ok when left to cool down?

The actual fault codes need to be read (someone with VCDS or a trusted local garage)

You also need to rule out the obvious cheap stuff (like failing battery)

Most of the time it would appear to be clutch position sensor fault (clutch 1 or 2) which show after 30mins + of driving.

this would need the mechatronics unit removed , tested then it can either be repaired or replaced and refitted.

note the oil is expensive (so its approx £250 just for that bit)

Hopefully you have a trusted garage locally.

they will either remove and send off

remove and fix (if they have the diagnostic kit and experience)

its pretty common these days so look for a DSG repair specialist in your area (post up first 3 letters of postcode and people whove had it done in your area might comment)

ballpark id suggest

if its the simple fault codes its £500 just to repair the mech unit

then you add in labour for removal and refit + new oil and filter

so if its just a sensor is around £1300-1500 all in

changing solenoids as well adds a little but not much

if the problems are deeper and also involve the clutch packs (unlikely) you can start doubling the cost. (at that point you might want to think about WBAC lol)

this is all independent garages, having this done by VW is much more (so you only really go that route if you have warranty)

just my 2p from what Ive read

(ours goes in for mech repair on Mon , 75k miles, clutch position sensor 1 fault code. approx cost is 1300 , for changing both clutch position sensors)