£380 for a cambelt change AND a minor service (Oil/filter?) is a great price. VW national price for a cambelt change alone is £669 and for a minor service is £184
www.volkswagen.co.uk/en/owners-and-drivers/servici...l
Contrast VW prices with Skoda or SEAT, exactly the same engines and running gear. Skoda charge £550 iirc for a cambelt change, SEAT is probably somewhere in between. Audi are are probably off the scale even though exactly the same engines.
VAG factory recommendation for EA211 engines is that the cambelt be inspected annually starting at 5 years and only changed if deterioration is found or at 110,000 miles/10 years max. Its quite easy to do, just remove the top plastic timing belt cover and follow the inspection instructions given in the factory service manual (easily found online)
Uk distributors choose to use a 5 year rule for reasons only known to themselves, relying on a history of poor design on older engine designs to justify the recommendation, unique to UK, the rest of Europe follow the factory recommendation.
I have yet to read of a single cambelt failure on EA211 engines and they have been around plenty long enough. Down to a sensibly sized belt using the latest materials, and clever use of non circular sprockets designed to cancel out tension variations as the valve gear is operated. Also the water pump is not directly driven by the cambelt but by a seperate belt off the other end of the camshaft.
One last comment, VAG cars no longer have printed service books, records are held on a VAG database. A good independent can access this database and add his service details using ERWIN iirc, thereby maintaining the record intact. There is a small cost involved so check if the independent is willing to do this
Edited by brum on 15/01/2022 at 12:49
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