Timing belt failure on a Certified 2001.5 Audi A4 with a 1yr Assured
Warranty left on the car. Audi service will not cover the costs. I have
read many articles here where people have stated Audi wouldnt cover the
costs because they were over a certain mileage, or out of the warranty.
I dont think it makes a difference whether you have the warranty or
not...its still your headache....right now its mine. Bought my Audi
less than 2 yrs ago, Certified with 19K miles on it. First week, I
noticed the car didnt start first crank. Send it in, they said I needed
a new fuel Pump, and covered the expense, minus $50 deductible. But it
wasnt fixed. Sent it back, it was a tiny hole in a hose. Paid another
$50 for time and efforts. Less than 5K miles both tires blew, and one
rim was damaged due to some Bubbles formed on sidewalls of tires.
Tires not covered, nor was the rim. Cost to repair $880. At 27K miles
new brakes needed. Audi Reccomends changing Rotors also as they are
rusting. Rusty rotors arent covered in Assured Warranty. Cost $590.
Last weekend driving on hi way and battery light and check engine both
come on same time. By the time I get to hard shoulder the battery is
almost flat. Emergency Towing delivers at nearest dealer late at night.
BIG MISTAKE !!! Gave dealer the opportunity to diagnose and report
multiple repairs needed. New Battery, Alternator, and Time belts. Since
changing Time belt, he also reccomends changing water pump and
Tensioner, and some seal. $1800 for waterpump, seal and Time belt,
$1200 for Alternator, $285 Battery and $330 diagnosis. $3600 worth
damage without any warning.
Car is sittign at dealer right now. I called Audi America, they called
dealer, and reported back that at very minium even if I dont fix the
car I still have to pay the diagnosis fees. But in any case only the
alternator is covered on warranty. Everything else Im responsible for.
Audi Assured wont cover you for Time Belt or Battery. They stated
despite low mileage since the car is 2001.5 its 5yrs old, which is
considered "wear" , so timing belt is on me.
Car drives like a dream when working but when its not its a major
expense. This car has only and always been maintained by Audi but it
doesnt seem to matter. Audi will fix small items and easy fixers but
anything major they wont copver you. If you are going to buy Audi,
sell after the 4yr Warranty is over because maintanance is very pricy.
Has anyone else had this problem with time belts in such low mileage?
Have their been any Class actions against Audi... Im seriously
considering getting a lawyer but need some direction on this.
Peter Bell - 02 Sep 2006 21:43 GMT
[Snip]
> Has anyone else had this problem with time belts in such low mileage?
Audi UK certainly wouldn't entertain a claim for timing belt at 5 years
old. The recommended change interval is now every four years (except
the RS6, which is every three years), or 60k miles, whichever comes
sooner.

Signature
Peter Bell - peter@bellfamily.org.uk
iws - 04 Sep 2006 04:07 GMT
> Timing belt failure on a Certified 2001.5 Audi A4 with a 1yr Assured
> Warranty left on the car. Audi service will not cover the costs. I have
[quoted text clipped - 20 lines]
> $1200 for Alternator, $285 Battery and $330 diagnosis. $3600 worth
> damage without any warning.
Hard to believe your timing belt has actually failed since if it had, you'd
almost certainly be looking at thousands in engine damage alone. Probably
they're recommending the TB change because of the age of the car. And it is
usually a good idea to replace the water pump, tensioner and thermostat at
the same time since much of the job is labor and each of these parts
requires pretty much the same disassembly. That said, $1800 is excessive - a
good independent Audi mechanic should do it for around $1000 or so. For the
battery, I suggest Autozone - they have one that fits my 98 A4 for about $75
so $285 sounds like robbery. As far as what's covered under the "Assured
Warranty", typically wear and tear items are NOT covered. Audis tend to go
through brakes and it is usual to have to replace the rotors along with the
brake pads.
> Car is sittign at dealer right now. I called Audi America, they called
> dealer, and reported back that at very minium even if I dont fix the
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
>
> Has anyone else had this problem with time belts in such low mileage?
Again, I suspect that your TB has not actually failed but is being replaced
as a precaution. Were it to fail, you'd be looking at many thousands of
dollars in engine repair. Audi used to have a longer mileage between TB
replacement but had a number of failures. Now they recommend both mileage
AND time periods between changes.
> Have their been any Class actions against Audi... Im seriously
> considering getting a lawyer but need some direction on this.
You can google audi class action but here's one of interest
http://tinyurl.com/bff6c
TR3NDSETR - 06 Sep 2006 03:49 GMT
thx for the feedback. Much appreciated. I guess I just have to absorb
the cost. But it just bothers me, cos I had to replace 2 tires that
blew due to some bubbling on side walls ..Audi didnt take resposibility
for that either, and that was with about 5-8K miles, and now this, for
a certified car in less than 2 yrs. Worries me what else is in store
for me. Car is a dream when its working but frustrating nightmare when
it breaks down.
Thanks for the responses.
> > Timing belt failure on a Certified 2001.5 Audi A4 with a 1yr Assured
> > Warranty left on the car. Audi service will not cover the costs. I have
[quoted text clipped - 61 lines]
> You can google audi class action but here's one of interest
> http://tinyurl.com/bff6c
Dave Lugo - 10 Sep 2006 00:07 GMT
> thx for the feedback. Much appreciated. I guess I just have to absorb
> the cost. But it just bothers me, cos I had to replace 2 tires that
[quoted text clipped - 4 lines]
> it breaks down.
> Thanks for the responses.
The CPO warranty is _not_ a bumper to bumper warranty, doesn't match the
original factory warranty, and doesn't cover wear items. That said,
sounds like the car wasn't properly certified by the dealer before it
was sold. (did you have anyone inspect if prior to purchasing it?)
Don't have the dealer do all the work, as their costs are typically 50%
above what a qualified independent shop would charge.
Get the alternator replaced and then have it flat-bedded somewhere else.
The region-specific forums on audiworld.com are a good place to ask
around for shop recommendations.

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Rick.Fister@gmail.com - 25 Sep 2006 23:41 GMT
I have a 1998 Audi A4 Quattro with the 1.8T engine and it recently had
a timing belt failure (86,000 mi). I was surprised because the dealer
had performed a related recall ("JK Campaign") just four months
earlier. In fact, the service invoice clearly stated that the timing
belt had been inspected and did not need to be replaced until 90,000 mi
(this was when the car had 82,000 mi). After telling this story to the
guy at my local shop, he advised me to call Audi and he gave me the 800
number. The customer service advocate at Audi was nice enough and he
verified that my wife was the original owner of the vehicle. He opened
a case and asked me what I'd like Audi to do. At first I thought he
was joking! So I told him politely that I'd like Audi to pay for the
cost of the repair and the other expenses I had incurred related to
this breakdown. So he took down more information and said he'd call
back the next day to let me know what they could do. The next morning
he called back and said that if it was in fact the timing belt that
failed, then Audi would pay for the repair and even the towing costs.
But he said I'd have to get it towed to the nearest Audi dealer (about
a $300 tow charge). Since my local shop is good I knew they wouldn't
mis-diagnose a timing belt failure, so I had it towed to a dealer. It
took over a month, but the dealer did replace the engine (head and
block) and there was no charge at all to me. (I did have to go without
a car for a month, though). About a month after that, I got a check
reimbursing me for the towing charges and a charge for three days of a
rental car. (They refused to pay for the rental car gas and my one
night stay in a hotel, though). While the car was in the shop, I got
something in the mail from the dealer that did the recall work (a
different dealer than the one putting in a new engine). It was a
general advertisement stating that there was a high demand for 1998 A4
1.8T vehicles such as mine, and it went on to say that I would be
offered some sort of bonus if I were to trade it in as part of a new
Audi purchase. This was the first piece of advertising mail I had ever
received from this particular dealer... I couldn't help but laugh at
the coincidence.
One out of many Daves - 26 Sep 2006 02:47 GMT
thanks for sharing that story.
It sounds like you had good success with Audi Customer Service.
>I have a 1998 Audi A4 Quattro with the 1.8T engine and it recently had
> a timing belt failure (86,000 mi). I was surprised because the dealer
[quoted text clipped - 29 lines]
> received from this particular dealer... I couldn't help but laugh at
> the coincidence.
Rick.Fister@gmail.com - 26 Sep 2006 22:04 GMT
I think I was lucky that the JK recall was done BEFORE the timing belt
failed... if not, I doubt that Audi would have been so understanding.
In fact this recall action happened when the oil cooler failed at 82000
mi! It was about a $1000 repair, but looking back, it saved me the
$5000+ repair for the new engine... Good luck with yours.
Rick
> thanks for sharing that story.
> It sounds like you had good success with Audi Customer Service.
[quoted text clipped - 32 lines]
> > received from this particular dealer... I couldn't help but laugh at
> > the coincidence.
Charlie Giannetto - 28 Sep 2006 14:50 GMT
Indeed you were lucky they did perform the recall inspection as
the 98 A4 1.8T had a problem not with the timing belt specifically but
with the timing belt tensioner. The tensioner design was flawed and
more than a few tensioner failures were reported in the AudiWorld
forums. The general consensus was to replace the timing belt and
tensioner (along with the water pump impeller and other belts while
you're in there) by 60,000 miles.
I'm very glad to hear that Audi did right by you.
- Charlie
04 S4 MT6
06 A4 Avant 2.0T Tip (the wife's ride)
>I think I was lucky that the JK recall was done BEFORE the timing belt
>failed... if not, I doubt that Audi would have been so understanding.
[quoted text clipped - 40 lines]
>> > received from this particular dealer... I couldn't help but laugh at
>> > the coincidence.