2001 Audi A6 2.8L Quantro

Hi everybody. I just bought this 01 audi A6 2.8LT.
It crank, but sounds very low and wont start as if it got a low battery.
I bought a new battery, but it still crank very low and no start. I jumped it with a big truck, still no start. I was thinking it may have a low power starter. But also, not sure. Someone heard the sound and says it sounds like a timing belt problem.
please can I do timing belt job myself? What are the tools needed and what parts do I need to buy.
thanks in advance.
It crank, but sounds very low and wont start as if it got a low battery.
I bought a new battery, but it still crank very low and no start. I jumped it with a big truck, still no start. I was thinking it may have a low power starter. But also, not sure. Someone heard the sound and says it sounds like a timing belt problem.
please can I do timing belt job myself? What are the tools needed and what parts do I need to buy.
thanks in advance.
It's a big SIN not to drive the car you love.
0
Comments
I think this is a major problem. Shouldn't it provide a code in ECU? I have been trying and trying but it not giving me any code. I even used over a thousand dollars obd from a friend, but still no codes . I can't do this myself. Pls how do I test timing belt issues from battery and starter?
To prove if the chain has in fact jumped time, the best way to test is with a digital storage oscilloscope and a pressure transducer. In many ways it is similar to a regular compression test but it reveals much more information about the condition of that cylinder in the engine. By combining that test with a high amps current probe to measure the starter current, and taking an ignition command signal to make sure when spark is occurring and an injector command you can see everything all at once. Many times when there is a camshaft/crankshaft synchronization issue the computer will be unable to calculate proper ignition and injection timing which is why we capture all of that simultaneously.
As far as whether you get codes or not. That really depends on the strategy programmed into the PCM to test the camshaft and crankshaft signals. If the strategy requires the engine rpm to be over a minimum value and that happens to be faster than the starter can crank the engine then you won't get any codes for that. However, if the timing is out far enough that the PCM cannot process the signals and figure out when to fire the spark plugs, the result can be that you don't get spark, which goes back to why we test everything simultaneously.