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deilenberger

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Everything posted by deilenberger

  1. 1. Normal 2. Spare in a can - liquid sealant you'd need if you didn't have a spare. Since you DO have a spare.. the hole remains empty. I store my trailer wiring adaptor in it. BTW - the wheel pin that threads into a lug-bolt hole - making it easier to put a tire on or off - is hidden under the jack. I now have two since I expected it to be somewhere obvious, and when it wasn't - I bought one.
  2. As far as a manual - the ones sold on ebay from the UK are a PDF of the PIWIS technical manuals. They are designed for experienced Porsche mechanics, so they don't assume this is your first time swinging a wrench. They annoyingly repeat every set of instructions (despite many being identical) for every model Cayenne that was made. (Base, diesel, /S, Turbo, V6-Turbo//S) It is about 11,000 pages in length. The other legitimate option is a subscription to ALLDATA. They have a special for a 1 year new subscription for around $15. The data isn't as intensive as the PDF from Europe, but it is MUCH easier to find things, and extensive enough to handle the majority of items you might run into. The subscription is model specific, so if you have an /S or GTS - you won't be wading through page after page of irrelevant material on the diesel or turbo vehicles.
  3. JFP - I think the concern comes from the BMW family tree - where charge parameters were actually changed over the life of a battery to optimize the charge characteristics to match the battery age/use. Some early battery failures on BMWs have been blamed on the failure to reset the charging parameters when changing batteries. As far as I can find - the charge voltages that Porsche uses are fine for any AGM battery that might be used... so no need to change the parameters.
  4. Do they unlock with the drivers door handle (assuming keyless entry on the vehicle)? And have you checked the rear-seat child interlock button on the drivers window control panel?
  5. This is one of those.. "can't actually do this" sort of things. I read this same message, and after installing a new AGM battery (identical to the old one) called two different Porsche dealer service departments to ask about having it done. They both said "What?" "We don't do that.." So I visited an independent with several different high-end code tools. The tools thought they could do it - but they couldn't. Wouldn't write to the ECU. My DuraMetric doesn't even offer the option, so I bought an ICarScan tools that does - it offers to do it and then tells you it can't do it. So I put a voltmeter up on the dash PCM multi-display as one of the lines in it. Found the system was happily charging away at around 13.2-13.5V no matter what (idle, higher engine speeds, more items on - it stayed the same..) Somehow I then pressed the "sport" button and spotted the charge voltage immediately jumped 1V higher (14.2-14.5V). Switched off "Sport" and it dropped back down. Tried manually selecting gears to get the same engine RPM/speed - the voltage didn't change. Went into "sport" mode - voltage went up, manually selected a higher gear to drop RPM - voltage remained up. So - figured out what the deal was - Porsche was maximizing MPG in "normal" mode. That's where the MPG rating is taken - not in sport mode. So by limiting the charge voltage and current, that minimizes the load on the engine, which ups MPG. In sport mode no one gives a darn about MPG - so they let it charge in a "normal" manner. Given that - there is no reason to program the ECU to the new battery. The charge circuitry is more interested in MPG than maximum battery life. MPG costs Porsche $$ (gas-guzzler tax) - which costs sales. The bean counters basically are setting your charging parameters. Short version: Fugeddaboutit. HTH,
  6. Ynor - I would need a bit clearer version of the diagrams you're looking at (a page reference, or heading reference also would be handy) in order to track them down on my workshop manual.
  7. I went through the wiring diagrams in the Porsche service manual. The only references to the Homelink were for the power (taken off fuse 47) and ground to it. There is a wiring diagram of the overhead console - that doesn't show it at all. The module mounts in the nose of the Cayenne above the center grille. Dunno if there is any existing wiring in that area or not. It's vaguely possible that the Homelink module to the overhead console link is made via Can-Buss, lots of other stuff on a Cayenne is controlled that way - but minus any detailed wiring diagrams I can't actually say.. Good luck and please post what you figure out..
  8. I believe the system has to be calibrated.. dunno if Durametric can do this or not. May require a dealer visit. Why was the compressor replaced? They should be long lasting on the 958 series since it's filled with nitrogen not just air, and it doesn't take any air (and moisture) in.
  9. Thanks for letting us know. This thread has been a topic of discussion on another forum where people are predicting/diagnosing a bad head gasket based on very sketchy data. Your thread serves as an example of the risk of doing that. And glad to hear it's up and running good! The oil cooler in the sump is an "interesting" design. Volvo many many decades ago used an oil/water oil cooler on the P1800S series of cars. It was infamous for causing the destruction of engines when it started leaking coolant into the oil. Luckily - it simply screwed into the block mounted oil-filter fitting (and the filter screwed into it) and had a few hoses to the cooling system, so it was rather easy to remove. Took about 30 minutes or so to eliminate that point of failure. Without it - the engines simply lasted about forever (one I owned made it to well over 375,000 miles and had never been opened up last I heard of it..)
  10. Somehow we missed the end of this story. Did it ever run correctly again? Don't leave us in suspense. Don't be "that guy.."
  11. any updates on this? Tool is actually a VW item and looks like this: About $54 from Samstag Tools Considerably cheaper from SnapOn - $32/pair.. https://vw.snapon.com/SpecialToolsDetail.aspx?itemId=16580009%C2'> They're showing out of stock at the moment. They were in stock about 2 weeks ago when I bought mine. And I never thought I'd be putting "cheaper from SnapOn" in a sentence.. go figure. In general I found their prices to be better then any of the aftermarket tool places for the VW/Porsche special tools.
  12. That does clearly explain the fill/level check. Doing it with a garden-sprayer should make it relatively painless.
  13. Most BMW transmissions, which use a similar design - you can only change about half the fluid at a time - since a lot of it is in the torque converter and most won't come out unless you disassemble and drain the transmission completely. I have heard numbers of 7-8 liters of fluid needed to do a change, so that pretty much agrees with the amount you've had come out. When the transmission is running - the oil pump in it keeps a lot of the fluid in the transmission fluid passages, solenoids, torque-converter. Once stopped it drains back down into the pan, which is what you experienced when you opened the drain plug without the engine running. And if the fill plug really isn't accessible - then injecting the fluid into the transmission while the engine is running (then doing the gear-shift dance) through the overflow pipe seems the way to go. I suspect I'd be looking at modifying a cheap pressure garden sprayer to use..
  14. Found some references to the tools: https://vw.snapon.com/specialtoolsdetail.aspx?itemid=18860006 - seemed to be the best price. This is 1389.. $117 https://vw.snapon.com/specialtoolsdetail.aspx?itemid=34720006 - best price again. This is 1390. $17. You can create a personal account on this SnapOn website. I did to get the assembly/alignment pins for the Turbo brakes (a special tool) Or you could watch: The video shows what appears to be filling it via the drain hole/overflow tube.
  15. The instructions: There are more detailed instructions on the fill - but they're basically the same as these. No mention whatsoever is made of a separate ATF fill plug, not to say it doesn't exist (it should..) but the factory manual and AllData never mention it. To me - the top tool they (1389) show appears that one of the probes would go up through the drain/level pipe and inject ATF above it. The need or use of the other probe may be for other transmissions.. The pipe like adaptor (1390) appears it would screw into the "drain" in place of the plug, and tool 1389 would go through it and snap into it. You would pump fluid up into the transmission and periodically pull out the 1389 tool to see if the oil level had reached the top of the pipe inside the fill/drain plug. MORE - thinking about what they're doing.. IF the pipe like adaptor (1390) is the correct length, and the snap-on probe part of 1389 are the right length, the second leg on 1389 makes sense. If it is designed when assembled and inserted into 1390 to be the height of the level pipe inside the transmission - ie - the desired fluid height - then opening the valve on that leg when the system isn't pumping fluid would give an indication if the fluid is at the level desired. It all sort of makes sense. In lieu of having the two tools - the pipe built into the drain/fill port can be used to check the level.
  16. There is a warranty (2 years?) on the replacement parts that were installed under warranty.. so that shouldn't be a huge concern. Is there a significant difference in wear on any of your tires (like one new one on one axle and the other 3 fairly well worn?) That sort of difference makes differentials (and the transfer case is more or less a rear-to-front differential) work much harder then they should, sometimes resulting in them giving up the ghost. A friend kept having the transfer case on his GMC Denalli go south on him - until I asked about tires. He'd had one tire replaced after a flat - the other 3 were fairly well worn. After his 3rd transfer case he asked me, I suggested new tires all the way around. He did - and the transfer case failures ended.
  17. Goblin - guess you never got an answer to this question? I considered doing the same thing on my '11 CTT - but realized the Porsche clock must be set by the PCM since there is no obvious way of setting it at the clock. This means some special wiring has to be in place to enable this, and I doubt if it is there on Cayennes that didn't originally come with the clock. So - I'm considering adding an aftermarket VDO clock - using the factory cover with the clock opening for the center vent/speaker, but haven't been able to find the diameter of the hole in the cover to see if the VDO clock (which is cheaper by a factor of 10x) would fit. At least with the VDO if you only need to provide it with power for the clock and a dash-light controlled source for the interior lighting, so the wiring should be fairly simple and DIY friendly. It sets via a button on the front. The VDO clock face matches the existing instruments nicely. If you've found out anything - please let us know.. BTW - link to the VDO clock on eBay: http://r.ebay.com/y3ImTk
  18. Just off the top of my head - and assuming the Cayenne is close to balanced 50/50 weight distribution.. lifting one wheel will only need 1/4 of the weight capability of the entire vehicle. So a 2 ton vehicle - a 0.5 ton jackstand should be sufficient to support the load normally carried by one wheel.
  19. The "Assembly Pins" can also be purchased at vw.snapon.com - for about $32 + shipping. Ordered a pair on Friday (and they do come as a pair..) SnapOn seems to be doing some of VW's special tools distribution. You can open a personal account at the website. Then search for the PN "T10439". For that amount of money IMHO it's not worth trying a bodge to get around buying the correct tools.
  20. Eric, Check under the vehicle menu on your multi-instrument-display in the dash. There is a setting there that allows for setting volume for all the audible warnings. It's probably down a few levels in the menus. To save it so it doesn't revert - after setting it - set your seat # again (press SET, then the seat# button.) Then after stopping and getting out of the vehicle - lock it using the key. If you don't do these - whatever it is now will simply reappear next time you unlock or start the vehicle.
  21. This posting? http://www.renntech.org/forums/topic/48968-2011-cayenne-transmission-oil-change/#entry272616
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