I had the 189 software fix applied to my car in November and had problems with it within a month.
I got two engine warning lights on my dashboard and the car would go into limp mode. This was quite intermittent at first and the next morning the lights had disappeared and the car worked as normal for a week or so. I didn't want to pay Audi silly money to diagnose it so I asked the local garage to look at it during the MOT in March. They diagnosed and EGR valve, but they couldn't source a part for 6-8 weeks as "Audi know about a problem with their 189 software fix that causes this". I took the car to Audi and they repaired it the next day for free.
A week later the car lost power over 2400 rpm, there were no warning lights but this wasn't intermittent. I dropped the car off at Audi and the next day they called to tell me the fault was with the boost pressure sensor and that it would be £210 to fix. I asked if it was linked in any way to the 189 software fix or the EGR replacement and they said that they were 99% sure it wasn't. I told them to fix the car anyway.
After some internet reading I see that the most common reason these fail is that there is a soot build up, just like the EGR valvues. Not only that but I found someone with the exact same complaint as mine after an EGR replacement. They had the boost pressure sensor replaced and the car still had the fault, they took it back in and now say that the new EGR is faulty and needs replacing.
I haven't got the car back yet, it is still with Audi. I will argue about what i have read to see if they will do the work for free again. Does anybody have any thoughts or comments about whether this is likely to be linked?
Edited by SoggyMoggy on 18/04/2017 at 11:32
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