silverRS4 wrote:ArthurPE wrote:
almost every bad case of deposits (every one I could find) was accompanied by another failure, usually the manifold flaps, and as stated in the patent, they are critical for alleviating (minimizing, you will always have some) deposits
You're not looking hard enough, and what you are finding you are interpreting incorrectly. Three cases that I can think of immediately, the owner had zero CEL's and no indication of a problem. They had no vacuum problems, no flap problems, not even 1 misfire, zero. Only consistent complaint was loss of top end power. In all three cases, the CB is removed (all else is the same) and the normal power character returns (along with 20-40 hp due to the ignition retardation decreasing normal levels). All had CB. Then, lets mention that EVERY RS4 that has had its manifold off has revealed some CB. That number must be close to 20 across all the forums. That does not include all the 2.0 and 3.6 FSI's. Yes, the manifold removal may have been necessitated for another problem. Stuck flaps (due to carbon) or bad injectors (due to carbon). You're saying the secondary problem causes (or worsens) the CB, when actually the CB is there all along and it takes a secondary problem for Audi to actually remove the manifold and see the CB. After 8k miles without the vanes, my valves were as cruddy as they were after 8k with the vanes. The patent seems to have more to do with valve surface treatment anyway - not really the scraping mechanism. Is it possible the surface treatment portion of the patent isn't even in production yet? The one thing made clear from the patent is that CB is a problem with direct injection - hence the tremendous effort to resolve it. Some DI cars see the CB at an advanced rate. For whatever reason (probably the more aggressive valve overlap and higher intake valve temps) the RS4 can see accelerated CB compared to the other VAG DI engines. Minor CB does not create a terrible problem. But eventually the ignition timing is no longer optimal and power (especially top end) will suffer.
according to you...I'll trust my judgement and skill set over yours, no offense...I know mine, and don't know yours...
I do know when you 'google' the issue 4 names are always present:
yours, RI RS4 (now RI A6 iirc, amongst others) and 'bob the oil guy', along with biosyn...
what the patent does (EVERY patent) is states the problem (that is required by law), and then the solution they are trying to patent...sometimes the problem is overstated to increase the proprietary nature and value of the solution...ie, justify the patent...
people have been (mis)using, disingenuously imo, the problem statement portion of the patent application as 'proof' VAG is 'aware' of the issue...heck, any engine engineer worth spit would know that valve deposits are a factor and need addressed in any design!
it's like telling an EE voltage drop must be considered in power engineering, lol
interesting trivia: in the US patent attorneys must also be licensed PE's