Audizine - An Automotive Enthusiast Community

Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 41 to 70 of 70
  1. #41
    Senior Member Two Rings Jmstrag's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 15 2010
    AZ Member #
    62753
    Location
    Canada

    Guest-only advertisement. Register or Log In now!
    I did the fluid change this week. I had someone look up the torque specs for the drain plug. Its listed at 45 nm or 33 ft/lbs. Thanks for the DIY write up.

  2. #42
    Senior Member Two Rings Demringstho864's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 26 2015
    AZ Member #
    357989
    Location
    Syracuse NY

    is royal purple any good for this. thats what i have always used in previous vehicles. or should i use something more German...
    2009 A4 2.0T Quattro Premium Plus
    Static dropped on 20s, lots of bolt ons, and some appearance stuff

  3. #43
    Established Member Two Rings
    Join Date
    Dec 13 2015
    AZ Member #
    365763
    My Garage
    Too%20many%20
    Location
    PA

    Just chiming in here.

    Redline MT90 is not meant for use in diffs. You need an EP/extreme pressure rated gear lube in the diff. Something like Redline 75W90 gear oil.

  4. #44
    Active Member Two Rings Mr_Skull's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 02 2015
    AZ Member #
    359253
    Location
    Nashville, TN

    Quote Originally Posted by TDIaholic View Post
    If you have a tiptronic transmission then the front diff has its own oil. If you have a manual the diff and trans share the same oil.
    Any pics or details on a front diff fluid change? I have a B8.5 and assumed the front transmission and differential all used the same fluid. I'm getting ready to do the real diff and now learning I need to find out more about this front differential. Thanks!

  5. #45
    Senior Member Two Rings Demringstho864's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 26 2015
    AZ Member #
    357989
    Location
    Syracuse NY

    Where is the fill on a 09. I can't find it anywhere
    2009 A4 2.0T Quattro Premium Plus
    Static dropped on 20s, lots of bolt ons, and some appearance stuff

  6. #46
    Veteran Member Four Rings
    Join Date
    Sep 24 2014
    AZ Member #
    284729
    My Garage
    2015 Audi Q3 Quattro, 2017 Corvette M7 Grand Sport, 2017 Audi SQ5, 2019 Porsche Macan, 24 Jetta GLI
    Location
    Central NJ

    The rear diff needs to use a GL-5 oil......

  7. #47
    Veteran Member Three Rings
    Join Date
    May 24 2007
    AZ Member #
    18290
    Location
    PA

    Anyone have info for the front diff? Also where is the fill plug for 2009's?

  8. #48
    Established Member Two Rings Dr. Awesome's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 22 2014
    AZ Member #
    277106
    My Garage
    2009 Chevy Silverado, 2011 Yamaha FZ8
    Location
    United States

    Quote Originally Posted by Demringstho864 View Post
    is royal purple any good for this. thats what i have always used in previous vehicles. or should i use something more German...
    Royal Purple should be fine, it's GL-4 and GL-5 rated. I'm no oil expert, but the specs are all there. I have some in the garage already so that's what I plan to use.

    Anyone have a suggestion for a good syringe to fill this? Maybe one that would work for a transmission fill, too?

  9. #49
    Veteran Member Four Rings Spawne32's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 20 2016
    AZ Member #
    386232
    Location
    NJ

    Im using redline 75w90 gear oil which is GL-5 spec as audi recommends this weekend, 90k on the fluids (just bought the car). Wouldnt run a manual trans fluid in a differential IMO just like someone said. Differentials tend to be extreme pressure environments and require friction modifiers regardless of whether they are LSD or not, has to do with the way the gears mesh. No syncros in diffs as well which is something they take into account with the manual trans fluid.

  10. #50
    Active Member Two Rings Mr_Skull's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 02 2015
    AZ Member #
    359253
    Location
    Nashville, TN

    I found this in another thread related to the front differential service on the B8.5 model. I'm planning on using GL-5 Synthetic 75W-90 on the front and rear. Now I'm curious about this center differential I'm reading about and what type of fluid it may utilize.

    Quote Originally Posted by djnice View Post
    On my 2014 the front diff has a small drain plug on the bottom of the housing. The fill plug is on the side behind the axle. You can access it through the wheel well and sliding the wrench and fill hose past the heat shield. The drain plug uses a 5 mm allen and the fill plug is an 8 mm allen.

    The center diff appears to need to be siphoned out. I did the rear and front and will do the center some other time. I am using Amsoil on the front and rear, but they don't list a product for the center.

    The Amsoil website says they all take 2.1 pints. The front diff drained out of the fill plug when I pulled it so I take it you just top it off.
    Edit: Found this in another thread related to the center differential.

    Quote Originally Posted by jfo View Post
    The center diff has Sturaco friction modifier added to the standard 75-90 fluid, to reduce stress in the limited slip diff. It's expensive at the dealer. I have read that it isn't required unless replacing/rebuilding the diff, but can't confirm if this is true. I asked ZF and they were vague, suggesting that I use the OEM fluid. So, I will take the conservative approach and buy the dealer fluid....probably $60/l vs $20 for the gear oil only. Since it's small $$ and a long time between changes, not worth it to risk it IMO. If the friction modifier is not sufficient you will get some noise or shudder with tight turns.
    There is a drain plug on the center diff, but you need to drop the trans support to access it. The fill plug on the side is also not easy to get to. I have done the front and rear but haven't tackled the center yet. The next time I'm under the car I will look more closely at the room available for the fill plug and getting a tube in there to extract the fluid.

  11. #51
    Veteran Member Four Rings Spawne32's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 20 2016
    AZ Member #
    386232
    Location
    NJ

    Did the diff fluid change today, fluid was surprisingly clearish coming out and seemed to be in relatively good shape, had some sparkly metal in the fluid which apparently is not uncommon. I don't have a lift so getting the car level is next to impossible so I went strictly by fluid capacities, drained a hair under 1 quart and pumped a quart of redline gear oil in which is NOT red in color, it is the same color as stock. Put some thread sealer on the plugs and hand tightened them, had to use a 8mm allen key on the drain because it sits behind the diff mount. Ill try to get a pic of the condition of the diff oil that came out.

  12. #52
    Veteran Member Four Rings JBAeroEngineer's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 19 2012
    AZ Member #
    100756
    Location
    Capitol Area

    Is there a DIY for the seals? Mine are leaking at the input shaft.

  13. #53
    Veteran Member Four Rings jfo's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 17 2010
    AZ Member #
    67149
    Location
    Courtenay, BC, Canada

    Quote Originally Posted by JBAeroEngineer View Post
    Is there a DIY for the seals? Mine are leaking at the input shaft.
    Sent you a pm
    2011 A4 Avant

  14. #54
    Veteran Member Four Rings SleeperCar's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 03 2012
    AZ Member #
    86119
    My Garage
    VW Atlas and too many detailing supplies
    Location
    Wilmington NC

    My car has 61k miles and I haven't touched this fluid....

    Hmmmmm
    2019 S4 Build

    2013 A4 Scuba Blue Metallic - SOLD (never forgotten)

    IG: @steves_s4

  15. #55
    Veteran Member Four Rings
    Join Date
    Aug 17 2015
    AZ Member #
    349632
    Location
    California

    Quote Originally Posted by SleeperCar View Post
    My car has 61k miles and I haven't touched this fluid....

    Hmmmmm
    I'm at 70k miles and havn't touched it as well. Planning on doing this in the next few weeks. Just decicing on what fluid to go with.

    I really like the Liquid Moly engine oil, so I might try their 75W-90 GL5 gear oil. Anyone have experience with this?

  16. #56
    Established Member Two Rings Dr. Awesome's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 22 2014
    AZ Member #
    277106
    My Garage
    2009 Chevy Silverado, 2011 Yamaha FZ8
    Location
    United States

    I just did this yesterday, my drain plug was on the rear of the diff instead of on the bottom (2012 A4 2.0T Quattro). It should be noted that the drain plug is very shallow as far as clearance goes, I ended up having to use a 90 degree 8mm allen wrench on it and a little cheater bar to get it off, which means I couldn't torque it when I re-installed, so I just tightened it down using a little less force than it took to get it off. The fill plug is easy with an extension and an allen wrench socket adapter, you just have to go over the top of the exhaust (though I have aftermarket, so I'm not sure if stock interferes). I used ramps on the front and jacked and supported by the pinch weld in the rear in order to get it nice and level. This is important since you are filling it until it flows out.

    I used Mobile 1 75W-90 GL-5 with a cheap hand pump off Amazon. I flushed it out a bit with since I could see some of the tiny metal flakes washing out, ended up using about 1.5 quarts. I'll probably do it again in 40-50k, maybe sooner if I run out of other things to do!

  17. #57
    Junior Member Two Rings KILLzombi3z's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 15 2011
    AZ Member #
    85289
    Location
    Where ever

    Hey op, pics don't show.

  18. #58
    Senior Member Two Rings
    Join Date
    Jun 03 2010
    AZ Member #
    59850
    My Garage
    2010 A4 Quattro, 2017 VW Golf Sportwagen 4motion
    Location
    Fort Myers, FL

    New DIY Videos!!
    1. Rear Differential Gear Oil video:https://youtu.be/RLyTP5qIRQk

    2. Front Differential Gear Oil video:https://youtu.be/xwD-gGGTyfE

    3. Transmission fluid and Center Transfer Case oil video:https://youtu.be/IY_VRHlfJuQ

    Sent from my LM-G820 using Audizine mobile app
    2010 Audi A4 Quattro, Follow my repair videos on youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/carsandcoding

  19. #59
    Veteran Member Four Rings
    Join Date
    Jul 16 2018
    AZ Member #
    422473
    Location
    Atlanta

    Only speaking for US spec info, there's the 0BC and 0BD rear diffs on our B8 A4 2.0T quattros. For the ZF automatic vehicles, it's 0BD-KBU and 0BC-KRR (3.308 ratio with 70.7mm flange). Manual vehicles appear to all have 0BC, with different stats than for the ZF, thus different diff code. 0BD has the drain plug on the lower backend. 0BC has the drain plug on the bottom.

    0BD-KBU, fill/inspect and drain plugs are the same, part number 0AA 409 057 (M16x1.5, 8mm inner hex), torque spec 45Nm.
    0BC-KRR, fill/inspect and drain plugs are the same, part number N10 037 105 (M22x1.5, 10mm inner hex), torque spec 30Nm.

    Guessing it's 10mm due to the first post; I have a KBU myself. No idea why the difference in torque spec, but that's what's printed in the Audi repair manuals, so that's what I'm typing here.

    I did not replace my plugs. Just cleaned them and oiled the o-rings with the new oil. Hope it doesn't turn out to be a mistake.

    For torquing the drain plug, it was pretty simple. For the fill plug, I had the torque wrench with a 15mm socket and 8mm hex stubby (from the GearWrench 81550 set) and that worked great. I was going to use that stubby with a crow foot for the drain plug, but crow foot is just too short for any use there. In place, I put my 8mm hex key back on, put my 8mm wrench on that (on the part sticking into the plug, not the handle sticking down) and then put the torque wrench with the 8mm stubby on the other end of the wrench. The wrench added 4" to the effective lever length, increasing my handle center to rotation point from 15" to 19". I had to adjust my torque setting: 45Nm / 19" * 15" = 35Nm. Easy enough.

    It would be really nice if someone out there made some metric sized (8mm-19mm) 3" long 3/8" drive torque adapters. I'm sure they would try and charge too much for them, so wrenches and hex bits it shall be.

    So this is what 201k miles old rear diff fluid looks like:

    rear diff fluid after 201k miles.jpg
    2009 A4 Avant 2.0T quattro Prestige, 275k miles

  20. #60
    Veteran Member Three Rings
    Join Date
    Aug 30 2018
    AZ Member #
    425714
    Location
    USA

    I just replaced my 2016 Allroad's rear differential fluid...Only strange thing is that I got 800ml drained out, yet I filled about 950ml...

    Could it have been underfilled at the factory potentially? Fluid was very clean, no metallic shards. Car was filled until it came out the top fill port...Didn't even jack up the car since its the Allroad, so it was definitely level.

    Sort of odd.
    2019 Audi Q5 - 28k; Arctic White; Black Optic
    2003 Mercedes ML350 - 166k; Gray

  21. #61
    Veteran Member Four Rings
    Join Date
    Aug 17 2015
    AZ Member #
    349632
    Location
    California

    Could have had some of it leak out over time. Take a look at the pinion and diff side seals for signs of weepage.

  22. #62
    Senior Member Two Rings LmG7119's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 03 2014
    AZ Member #
    248429
    Location
    MNN

    Is there a schedule when you need to do those or you guys are doing it just because( for low mileage cars)?
    2013 Allroad Premium Plus UM stage 1
    2003 Allroad EPL Stage1+ straight downpipes catless(sold at 187K miles)

  23. #63
    Senior Member Two Rings
    Join Date
    Nov 21 2019
    AZ Member #
    527935
    Location
    Japan

    Why does the MT-90 oem chart list the part number for the rear diff oil, yet it's not gl-5? I've just got some.based on this, but now I read it's not gl-5! FML

    Sent from my MHA-L29 using Audizine Forum mobile app

  24. #64
    Junior Member One Ring Skribbles505's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 24 2021
    AZ Member #
    635691
    Location
    Albuquerque, NM, USA

    All 3 videos really helped me with this yesterday. Really glad a community exits with posts like this! Unfortunately the front diff fill stripped so I still need to get that out and broke the center diff drain plug when I tightened it so I'm waiting on new ones to arrive. 168k and it's probably never been done before.
    2009 B8 A4 Quattro - Meteor Gray | ZF6 | custom TCU tune | APR stage 1 | AWE Tuning Exhaust

  25. #65
    Established Member Two Rings JSIL1's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 04 2009
    AZ Member #
    45920
    Location
    Mile High and gaspin'

    I know I'm dredging up the dead, however, what about Amsoil 75w90 Severe Duty for the rear diff?

    its product sheet shows GL5
    2009 A4 2.0T 6sp Quattro Sedan: Ibis White on Black, Premium Plus, 18" Sport Package.
    2018 S4 3.0T: Daytona Grey: Premium Plus, 034 Springs.

    Past: 1999 CR-V EX
    1999 Taurus SHO
    1995 Taurus GL

  26. #66
    Veteran Member Four Rings
    Join Date
    Jul 16 2018
    AZ Member #
    422473
    Location
    Atlanta

    If it's a 75w90 GL5, I imagine it'll be fine enough. I don't know what their Severe Duty tag implies or if it's necessary for a car. But I can't see it being problematic.
    2009 A4 Avant 2.0T quattro Prestige, 275k miles

  27. #67
    Established Member Two Rings JSIL1's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 04 2009
    AZ Member #
    45920
    Location
    Mile High and gaspin'

    Quote Originally Posted by Smac770 View Post
    If it's a 75w90 GL5, I imagine it'll be fine enough. I don't know what their Severe Duty tag implies or if it's necessary for a car. But I can't see it being problematic.
    That is what I was thinking.

    They have a 'normal' version 'Long Life Synthetic' that is GL5 rated as well, I was just leaning towards the Severe Duty because I track it occasionally and drive it pretty hard.



    EDIT: I just got off the phone with a gentleman named Darren from AMSOIL and he confirmed that I want to use the Severe Duty version. The Severe Gear is designed for non-commercial vehicles while the long life product is for large trucks and OTR heavy-duty applications. It is based off the fact that consumer vehicles have a sump in them and a lighter load demand. Long Life is for trucks with massive sumps and extreme loads. TIL.
    2009 A4 2.0T 6sp Quattro Sedan: Ibis White on Black, Premium Plus, 18" Sport Package.
    2018 S4 3.0T: Daytona Grey: Premium Plus, 034 Springs.

    Past: 1999 CR-V EX
    1999 Taurus SHO
    1995 Taurus GL

  28. #68
    Veteran Member Three Rings cincyadam's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 16 2011
    AZ Member #
    69559
    Location
    Cincinnati, Ohio USA

    Aside from the ATF fluid change on CVT cars, I’m not seeing anything on the Audi maintenance schedule regarding the differentials. Anyone have info on the intervals?

  29. #69
    Established Member Two Rings JSIL1's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 04 2009
    AZ Member #
    45920
    Location
    Mile High and gaspin'

    This is from my local Audi dealer.

    They only call out the RS5/7 and the R8, however, ounce of prevention.....

    First change at 40k mi, and then every 40k after.

    https://www.prestigeimports.net/serv...nd-procedures/

    I just changed my fluids, I had Fuchs in Diff and Audi in my MT, not Redline MT-90 and AMSOIL 75w-90

    Transmission has about 60K. Diff has about 45K

    Fluids - Diff - LEFT MT - RIGHT




    2009 A4 2.0T 6sp Quattro Sedan: Ibis White on Black, Premium Plus, 18" Sport Package.
    2018 S4 3.0T: Daytona Grey: Premium Plus, 034 Springs.

    Past: 1999 CR-V EX
    1999 Taurus SHO
    1995 Taurus GL

  30. #70
    Veteran Member Three Rings Chillaxin's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 28 2018
    AZ Member #
    416237
    Location
    Jacksonville FL

    Reviving this thread from the dead. I'm looking to centralize some information about front/rear diff fluid (NOT CENTER DIFF). All of these are 75W90 Synthetic.

    Amsoil Severe Gear GL5 Viscosity@40C 97.8 cSt, Viscosity@100C 16.0 cSt, Pour Point -43C, Flash Point 222C

    Amsoil Long Life Gear GL5 Viscosity@40C 115.8 cSt, Viscosity@100C 15.7 cSt, Pour Point -48C, Flash Point 208C

    Liquid Moly Hypoid Gear Oil GL4/5 Viscosity@40C 106.0 cSt, Viscosity@100C 15.6 cSt, Pour Point -50C, Flash Point 200C

    Liquid Moly HP Gear Oil GL4+ Viscosity@40C 81.5 cSt, Viscosity@100C 14.3 cSt, Pour Point -60C, Flash Point 200C

    Redline GL-5 Gear Oil Viscosity@40C 108 cSt, Viscosity@100C 16.1 cSt, Pour Point -45C, Flash Point Not Listed

    Redline MT-90 GL4 Viscosity@40C 82 cSt, Viscosity@100C 15.5 cSt, Pour Point -45C, Flash Point Not Listed - This is what redline's website recommends for F/R Diffs for B8 A4 with ZF8speed.

    After looking through all of these, the best oil for fuel economy would be the LM GL4+ available from FCP. The automatic doesn't produce high shock loads or extreme pressures of a non-tracked car mostly used for commutes. This benefit would be amplified in cold weather and short trips. If I were to track or race, or had a manual that did launches, that would be a different story.

    I wasn't able to find any datasheet for the OEM fluid G052145S2.

    I just did some digging around and thought I'd share this info for anyone looking.

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  


    © 2001-2025 Audizine, Audizine.com, and Driverzines.com
    Audizine is an independently owned and operated automotive enthusiast community and news website.
    Audi and the Audi logo(s) are copyright/trademark Audi AG. Audizine is not endorsed by or affiliated with Audi AG.