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#1
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#2
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We are all well aware of the benefits of modifying a used vehicle, for starters they are cheaper than buying a new car to start fiddling around with and even better, the older the vehicle the less likely that there are any warranties to void by swapping in a few high performance parts either. One such example is the first generation Audi RS6, produced between 2002 and 2004, the midsize A6 super car makes use of a 40 Valve 4.2 Liter biturbo V8 making 444 HP and 413 lb-ft of torque straight from t... Read More: http://www.topspeed.com/cars/car-news/classic-tuning-audi-rs6-by-mfk-autosport-ar80450.html |
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NewsHub: Latest auto news sourced from websites, portals and blogs http://www.carshops247.co.uk/news/Audi.html |
#3
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It is, however, expensive to maintain. Brake jobs are horrendous, changing the timing belt (every 35K miles) is jaw-dropping. I religiously change the synthetic oil every 3k miles (again, expensive). |
#4
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On Sun, 25 Oct 2009 12:11:03 -0400, against all advice, something compelled David LaCourse <dplacourse (AT) aol (DOT) com>, to say: It is, however, expensive to maintain. Brake jobs are horrendous, changing the timing belt (every 35K miles) is jaw-dropping. I religiously change the synthetic oil every 3k miles (again, expensive). You have a very short service interval. My TT will go 10,000 miles between services. Why do you have to do these things so frequently? I can't imagine a timing belt needing to be replaced every two years or so. |
#5
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On 2009-10-25 13:24:26 -0400, Steve Daniels <sdaniels (AT) gorge (DOT) net> said: On Sun, 25 Oct 2009 12:11:03 -0400, against all advice, something compelled David LaCourse <dplacourse (AT) aol (DOT) com>, to say: It is, however, expensive to maintain. Brake jobs are horrendous, changing the timing belt (every 35K miles) is jaw-dropping. I religiously change the synthetic oil every 3k miles (again, expensive). You have a very short service interval. My TT will go 10,000 miles between services. Why do you have to do these things so frequently? I can't imagine a timing belt needing to be replaced every two years or so. The RS6 will go 10k between services. I wouldn't drive ANY car on ANY oil for 10k miles. I once had a Porsche that supposedly could go 15K between services. I changed it twice before the dealer changed it. I change the oil frequently because I drive it hard and I don't want it to fail. |
#6
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X-no-archive: yes David LaCourse wrote: On 2009-10-25 13:24:26 -0400, Steve Daniels <sdaniels (AT) gorge (DOT) net> said: On Sun, 25 Oct 2009 12:11:03 -0400, against all advice, something compelled David LaCourse <dplacourse (AT) aol (DOT) com>, to say: It is, however, expensive to maintain. Brake jobs are horrendous, changing the timing belt (every 35K miles) is jaw-dropping. I religiously change the synthetic oil every 3k miles (again, expensive). You have a very short service interval. My TT will go 10,000 miles between services. Why do you have to do these things so frequently? I can't imagine a timing belt needing to be replaced every two years or so. The RS6 will go 10k between services. I wouldn't drive ANY car on ANY oil for 10k miles. I once had a Porsche that supposedly could go 15K between services. I changed it twice before the dealer changed it. I change the oil frequently because I drive it hard and I don't want it to fail. It would be interesting to compare new oil to oil removed after 3k and 10k miles to see how much of a difference there is. My A3 has the variable service and although it's not driven overly hard, I only get it serviced when it recommends. The last two have been after 17k miles each (about 18months - 2yrs of use). I guess if you're happy paying the additional cost then it's not an issue. For me personally, I'm happy with replacing it as and when advised. |
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